FRDM-THE-LIBRARYOF TRINITYCOLLEGE-TORQNTO PRESENTED A.D. BY Professor D.D.C. Chambers Catena 31 ti r c a. COMMENTARY ON THE FOUR GOSPELS, COLLECTED OUT OF THE WORKS OF THE FATHERS BY S. THOMAS AQUINAS. VOL. IV, PART 1. ST. JOHN. OXFORD, JOHN HENRY PARKER; J. G. F. AND J. RIVINGTON, LONDON. MDCCCXLV. t-, MAR 1382 ADVERTISEMENT. THE following Compilation not being admissible into the Library of the Fathers from the date of some few of the authors introduced into it, the Editors of the latter work have been led to publish it in a separate form, being assured that those who have subscribed to their Translations of the entire Treatises of the ancient Catholic divines, will not feel less interest, or find less benefit, in the use of so very judicious and beautiful a selection from them. The Editors refer to the Preface for some account of the natural and characteristic excellences of the work, which will be found as useful in the private study of the Gospels, as it is well adapted for family reading, and full of thought for those who are engaged in religious instruction, Oxford, MayG, 184], COMMENTARY ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. CHAP. I. Ver. 1. In the beginning was the Word, CHRYS. While all the other Evangelists begin with the Chrys. Incarnation, John, passing over the Conception, Nativity, j-^^'j1^' education, and growth, speaks immediately of the Eternal Joan- Generation, saying, In the beginning was the Word. AUG. Aug.lib. The Greek word "logos" signifies both Word and Reason.^™' But in this passage it is better to interpret it Word ; as refer- q- 63. ring not only to the Father, but to the creation of things by the operative power of the Word; whereas Reason, though it produce nothing, is still rightly called Reason. AUG. Words Aug.- by their daily use, sound, and passage out of us, have become common things. But there is a word which remaineth inward, Joan. i. in the very man himself; distinct from the sound which pro- ceedeth out of the mouth.' There is a word, which is truly and spiritually that, which you understand by the sound, not being the actual sound. Now whoever can conceive thedeTrin. notion of word, as existing not only before its sound, but even before the idea of its sound is formed, may see enigmati cally, and as it were in a glass, some similitude of that Word of Which it is said, In the beginning was the Word. For when we give expression to something which we know, the word used is necessarily derived from the knowledge thus retained in the memory, and must be of the same quality with that knowledge. For a word is a thought formed from a thing which we know ; which word is spoken in the heart, being neither Greek nor Latin, nor of any language, though, when we want to communicate it to others, some sign is assumed VOL. iv. « GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. Ibid, by which to express it. ... Wherefore the word which sounds cap. 2" (xi.) cap. 20. ly, is a sign of the word which lies hid within, to which the name of word more truly appertains. For that which is uttered by the mouth of our flesh, is the voice of the word ; and is in fact called word, with reference to that from which it Basil, is taken, when it is developed externally. BASIL ; This Word J^' m is not a human word. For how was there a human word in Joan, the beginning, \vhen man received his being last of all ? There was not then any word of man in the beginning, nor yet of Angels; for every creature is within the limits of time, having its beginning of existence from the Creator. But what says the Gospel ? It calls the Only-Begotten Himself Chrys. the Word. CHRYS. But why omitting the Father, does he .'ii .proceed at once to speak of the Son? Because the Father POM-was known to all; though not as the Father, yet as God; whereas the Only-Begotten was not known. As was me^t then, he endeavours first of all to inculcate the knowledge of the Son on those who knew Him not; though neither in dis coursing on Him, is he altogether silent on the Father. And inasmuch as he was about to teach that the Word was the Only-Begotten Son of God, that no one might think this '• open sea vanish, and leave nothing whereon to fix the eye; so the Evangelist here, taking us with him in his flight above the created world, leaves the eye to gaze in vacancy on an illimitable expanse. For the words, was in the "beginning^ are significative of eternal and infinite essence. AUG. They Aug. de say, however, if He is the Son, He was born. We allow it. £^m' They rejoin: if the Son was born to the Father, the Father Serm- was, before the Son was born to Him. This the Faith [117.] rejects. Then they say, explain to us how the Son could ^ 6- be born from the Father, and yet be coeval with Him from whom He is born : for sons are born after their fathers, to succeed them on their death. They adduce analogies from nature; and we must endeavour likewise to do the same for our doctrine. But how can we find in nature a coeteraal, when we cannot find an eternal ? However, if a thing generating and a thing generated can be found any where coeval, it will be a help to forming a notion of coeternals. Now Wisdom herself is called in the Scriptures, the bright- wisd. 7 ness of Everlasting Light, the image of the Father. Hence 26- then let us take our comparison, and from coevals form a notion of coeternals. Now no one doubts that brightness proceeds from fire: fire then we may consider the father of the brightness. Presently, when I light a candle, at the same instant with the fire, brightness ariseth. Give me the fire without the brightness, and I will with thee believe that the Father was without the Son. An image is produced by a mirror. The image exists as soon as the beholder appears; yet the beholder existed before he came to the mirror. Let us suppose then a twig, or a blade of grass which has grown up by the water side. Is it not born with its image? If there had always been the twig, there 6 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. would always have been the image proceeding from the twig. And whatever is from another thing, is born. So then that which generates may be coexistent from eternity with that which is generated from it. But some one will say perhaps, Well, I understand now the eternal Father, the coeternal Son : yet the Son is like the emitted brightness, which is less bril liant than the fire, or the reflected image, which is less real than the twig. Not so: there is complete equality between Father and Son. I do not believe, he says ; for thou hast found nothing whereto to liken it. However, perhaps we can find something in nature by which we may understand that the Son is both coeternal with the Father, and in no respect inferior also: though we cannot find any one material of com parison that will be sufficient singly, and must therefore join together two, one of which has been employed by our adver saries, the other by ourselves. For they have drawn their comparison from things which are preceded in time by the things which they spring from, man, for example, from man. Nevertheless, man is of the same substance with man. We have then in that nativity an equality of nature; an equality of time is wanting. But in the comparison which we have drawn from the brightness of fire, and the reflexion of a twig, an equality of nature thou dost not find, of time thou dost. In the Godhead then there is found as a whole, what here exists in single and separate parts; and that which is in the creation, existing in a manner suitable to the Cone Creator. Ex GESTIS CONCILII EPHESIM ; Wherefore in one Eph. place divine Scripture calls Him the Son, in another the Word, in another the Brightness of the Father; names severally meant to guard against blasphemy. For, foras much as thy son is of the same nature with thyself, the Scripture wishing to shew that the Substance of the Father and the Son is one, sets forth the Son of the Father, born of the Father, the Only-Begotten. Next, since the terms birth and son, convey the idea of passibleness, therefore it calls the Son the Word, declaring by that name the impassibility of His Nativity. But inasmuch as a father with us is neces sarily older than his son, lest thou shouldest think that this applied to the Divine nature as well, it calls the Only-Begotten the Brightness of the Father ; for brightness, though arising VER. 1. ST. JOHN. 7 from the sun, is not posterior to it. Understand then that Brightness, as revealing the coeternity of the Son with the Father ; Word as proving the impassibility of His birth, and Son as conveying His consubstantiality. CHRYS. But they Chrys. say that In the beginning does not absolutely express -m j^n. eternity: for that the same is said of the heaven and thQ *"•["•] earth: In the beginning God made the heaven and the Gen. 1, earth. But are not made and was, altogether different?1' For in like manner as the word is, when spoken of man, signifies the present only, but when applied to God, that which always and eternally is ; so too was, predicated of our nature, signifies the past, but predicated of God, eternity. ORIGEN ; The verb to &e, has a double signification, sometimes Orig. expressing the motions which take place in time, as other divers, verbs do; sometimes the substance of that one thing of which loc< it is predicated, without reference to time. Hence it is also called a substantive verb. HILARY ; Consider then the world, Hilar. understand what is written of it. In the beginning God Tim. made the heaven and the earth. Whatever therefore isc>xili' created is made in the beginning, and thou wouldest contain in time, what, as being to be made, is contained in the be ginning. But, lo, for me, an illiterate unlearned fisherman is 1H.eus independent of time, unconfined by ages, advanceth beyond (H?h)°r all beginnings. For the Word was, what it is, and is not bounded by any time, nor commenced therein, seeing It was not made in the beginning, but was. ALCUIN; To refute those who inferred from Christ's Birth in time, that He had not been from everlasting, the Evangelist begins with the eternity of the Word, saying, lit the beginning was the Word. And the Word was with God. CHRYS. Because it is an especial attribute of God, to be Chrys. eternal and without a beginning, he laid this down first : then, m°i 3"'" lest any one on hearing in the beginning was the Word, should suppose the Word Unbegotten, he instantly guarded against this; saying, And the Word icas with God. HILARY ;?1JjJer* From the beginning He is with God: and though inde-Trin. 8 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. Basil, pendent of time, is not independent of an Author. BASIL; priuc.'m Again he repeats this, was, because of men blasphemously Joan, saying, that there was a time when He was not. Where then was the Word ? Illimitable things are not contained in space. Where was He then ? With God. For neither is the Father bounded by place, nor the Son by aught °"g- .. circumscribing. ORIGEN ; It is worth while noting, that, in joan' whereas the Word is said to come1 [be made] to some, as to c'}- Hosea. Isaiah, Jeremiah, with God it is not made, as though lfactum Vulg. it were not with Him before. But, the Word having been E??x always with Him, it is said, and the Word was with God: for from the beginning it was not separate from the Father. Chrys. CHRYS. He has not said, was in God, but was with God: 'exhibiting to us that eternity which He had in accordance Theoph. with His Person. THEOPHYL. Sabellius is overthrown by mloco. tj^s text For jje asserts that the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are one Person, Who sometimes appeared as the Father, sometimes as the Son, sometimes as the Holy Ghost. But he is manifestly confounded by this text, and the Word was with God; for here the Evangelist declares that the Son is one Person, God the Father another. And the Word was God. Hiiar.ii. HILARY ; Thou wilt say, that a word is the sound of the voice, deTri c. 15. rm> the enunciation of a thing, the expression of a thought : this Word was in the beginning with God, because the utterance of thought is eternal, when He who thinketh is eternal. But how was that in the beginning, which exists no time either before, or after, I doubt even whether in time at all ? For speech is neither in existence before one speaks, nor after ; in the very act of speaking it vanishes ; for by the time a speech is ended, that from which it began does not exist. But even if the first sentence, in the beginning was the Word, was through thy inattention lost upon thee, why disputest thou about the next ; and the Word was with God? Didst thou hear it said, " In God," so that thou shouldest under stand this Word to be only the expression of hidden thoughts ? Or did John say with by mistake, and was not VER. I. ST. JOHN. ' 9 aware of the distinction between being in, and being with, when he said, that what was in the beginning, was not in God, but with God ? Hear then the nature and name of the Word ; and the Word was God. No more then of the sound of the voice, of the expression of the thought. The Word here is a Substance, not a sound ; a Nature, not an expression; God, not a nonentity. HILARY; But the title isHilar. absolute, and free from the offence of an extraneous subject. Trinfc. To Moses it is said, / have given1 thee for a god fo9*10*11- Pharaoh: but is not the reason for the name added, when iti. is said, to Pharaoh? Moses is given for a god to Pharaoh, l^yest when he is feared, when he is entreated, when he punishes, made, when he heals. And it is one thing to be given for a God, ng' r* another thing to be God. I remember too another applica tion of the name in the Psalms, / have said, ye are gods. Ps. 82. But there too it is implied that the title was but bestowed ; and the introduction of, / said, makes it rather the phrase of the Speaker, than the name of the thing. But when I hear the Word was God, I not only hear the Word said to be, but perceive It proved to be, God. BASIL ; Thus cutting Basil, off the cavils of blasphemers, and those who ask what t Word is, he replies, and the Word was God. THEOPHYL. Or Joan combine it thus. From the Word being with God, it follows plainly that there are two Persons. But these two are of one Nature ; and therefore it proceeds, In the Word was God: to shew that Father and Son are of One Nature, being of One Godhead. ORIGEN; We must add too, that theOrig. Word illuminates the Prophets with Divine wisdom, in th He cometh to them ; but that with God He ever is, because i He is God a. For which reason he placed and the Word was with God, before and the Word was God. CHRYS. Not assert- Chrys. ing, as Plato does, one to be intelligence1, the other soul 2; for r. ^' Jj" the Divine Nature is very different from this But you ' »•& ^ say, the Father is called God with the addition of the article, iv. [**] the Son without it. What say you then, when the Apostle3' a The Greek has, #<>of $g T^» 0m o equally present with God. S.Thomas Gtos is'ii rv>y%Kvuv, KTO rou tiveti wgsf avoids the apparent tautology in the UVTOV, lit. but with God, God is present original by substituting " apud Deum at all times, because He is with Him, vero est Verbum obtinere ab eo quod i. e. rwy%cimv and tiveu are one with sit Deus." God. The "Word, as God, is always 10 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. 1. Tit. 2, writes, The great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ; and again, Rom. 9 Who is over all, God; and Grace be unto you and peace 5- from God our Father; without the article? Besides, too, it 7. 'were superfluous here, to affix what had been affixed just before. So that it does not follow, though the article is not affixed to the Son, that He is therefore an inferior God. 2. The same was in the beginning with God. Hilar. HILARY; Whereas he had said, the Word was God, the Trin. c. tearfulness, and strangeness of the speech disturbed me ; the 16- prophets having declared that God was One. But, to quiet my apprehensions, the fisherman reveals the scheme of this so great mystery, and refers all to one, without dishonour, with out obliterating [the Person], without reference to time b, saying, The Same was in the beginning with God; with One Unbegotten God, from whom He is, the One Only-begotten God. THEOPHYL. Again, to stop any diabolical suspicion, that the Word, because He was God, might have rebelled against His Father, as certain Gentiles fable, or, being- separate, have become the antagonist of the Father Himself, he says, The Same was in the beginning with God; that is to say, this Word of God never existed separate from Chrys. Q-OC| CiiRYS. Or, lest hearing that In the beginning was [iii.] §. the Word, you should regard It as eternal, but yet under stand the Father's Life to have some degree of priority, he has introduced the words, The Same was in the beginning with God. For God was never solitary, apart from Him, but ibid. 3. always God with God. Or forasmuch as he said, the Word was God, that no one might think the Divinity of the Son inferior, he immediately subjoins the marks of proper cu- Divinity, in that he both again mentions Eternity, The Same ^ ^ ^ beginning with God ; and adds His attribute of Orig. Creator, All things were made by Him. ORIGEN ; Or thus, iiTjoan. tne Evangelist having begun with those propositions, reunites c- 4- them into one, saying, The Same was in the beginning with b Since He was 1) " in the begin- nor 3) in existing in God only, so as to ning," and 2) " God," and 3) " with confound or destroy the Personality. God," He was 1) not " in time," nor [from S. Hil. 1. c.] 2) a word, but The Word, (see p. 8.) VER. 3. ST. JOHN. 11 God. For in the first of the three we learnt in what the Word was, that it was in the beginning ; in the second, with whom, with God; in the third who the Word was, God. Having, then, by the term, The Same, set before us in a manner God the Word of Whom he had spoken, he collects all into the fourth proposition, viz. In the begin ning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God; into, the Same was in the beginning with God. It may be asked, however, why it is not said, In the beginning was the Word of God, and the Word of God was with God, and the Word of God was God ? Now whoever will admit that truth is one, must needs admit also that the demonstration of truth, that is wisdom, is one. But if truth is one, and wisdom is one, the Word which enuntiates truth and developes wisdom in those who are capable of receiving it, must be One also. And therefore it would have been out of place here to have said, the Word of God, as if there were other words besides that of God, a word of angels, word of men, and so on. We do not say this, to deny that It is the Word of God, but to shew the use of omitting the word God. John himself too in the Apocalypse says, And his Name is called the Word of God. Rev.i9, ALCUIN ; Wherefore does he use the substantive verb, was ? le That you might understand that the Word, Which is co- eternal with God the Father, was before all time. 3. All things were made by him. ALCUIN; After speaking of the nature of the Son, he proceeds to His operations, saying, All things were made by him, i. e. every thing whether substance, or property. HILARY ; Hiiar. Or thus: [It is said], the Word indeed was in the beginning, ^j^ but it may be that He was not before the beginning. Bute. 17. what saith he; All things were made by him. He is infinite by Whom every thing, which is, was made : and since all things were made by Him, time is likewise0. CHRYS. Moses Chrys. indeed, in the beginning of the Old Testament, speaks to us in much detail of the natural world, saying, In the c That is to say, The text, All He Who made all things, made time, things were made by Him, makes up for and so must have existed before time, the words, in the beginning, should these i. e. from eternity, appear to fall short of eternity. For 12 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. 1. beginning God made the heaven and the earth; and then relates how that the light, and the firmament, and the stars, and the various kinds of animals were created. But the Evangelist sums up the whole of this in a word, as familiar to his hearers; and hastens to loftier matter, making the whole of his book to bear not on the works, but on the Aug. i. Maker. AUG. Since all things were made by him, it is evident adirt?n* that ttgnt was also, when God said, Let there be light. And cap. 2. in like manner the rest. But if so, that which God said, viz. Let there be light, is eternal. For the Word of God, God with God, is coeternal with the Father, though the world created by Him be temporal. For whereas our when and sometimes are words of time, in the Word of God, on the contrary, when a thing ought to be made, is eternal ; and the thing is then made, when in that Word it is that it ought to be made, which Word hath in It neither when, or at sometime, Aug. since It is all eternal. AUG. How then can the Word of God LctT be made* when God by the Word made all things ? For if the c. 11. Word Itself were made, by what other Word was It made ? If you say it was the Word of the Word by Which That was made, that Word I call the Only-Begotten Son of God. 1 Ver- But if thou dost not call It the Word of the Word *, then Verb! grant that that Word was not made, by which all things were ed.Ben. made. AUG. And if It is not made, It is not a creature; but Aug. de if It is not a creature, It is of the same Substance with the T"n; V Father. For every substance which is not God is a creature ; c.9.(vi.) Theoph. and what is not a creature is God. THEOPHYL. The Arians in loc* are wont to say, that all things are spoken of as made by the Son, in the sense in which we say a door is made by a saw, viz. as an instrument; not that He was Himself the Maker. And so they talk of the Son as a thing made, as if He were made for this purpose, that all things might be made by Him. Now we to the inventors of this lie reply simply: If, as ye say, the Father had created the Son, in order to make use of Him as an instrument, it would appear that the Son were less honourable than the things made, just as things made by a saw are more noble than the saw itself; the saw' having been made for their sake. In like way do they speak of the Father creating the Son for the sake of the things made, as if, had He thought good to create the universe, neither would He have produced VER. 3. ST. JOHN. 13 the Son. What can be more insane than such language ? They argue, however, why was it not said that the Word made all things, instead of the preposition by1 being used?1*'* For this reason, that thou mightest not understand an Un- begotten and Unoriginate Son, a rival God d. CHRYS. If Chrys. the preposition by perplex thee, and thou wouldest learn j^'1^1 from Scripture that the Word Itself ina.de all things, hear David, [iv.]c.2. Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the Ps. 101. earth, and the heavens are the work of Thy hands. That he spoke this of the Only-Begotten, you learn from the Apostle, who in the Epistle to the Hebrews applies these words to the Son. CHRYS. But if you say that the prophet spoke this of the Chrys. Father, and that Paul applied it to the Son, it comes to the same c ^^' thing. For he would nothave mentioned that as applicable to the Son, unless he fully considered that the Father and the Son were of equal dignity. If again thou dream that in the preposition by any subjection is implied, why does Paul use t of the Father ? as, God is faithful, by Whom ye were called i Cor.i, Q into the fellowship of His Son; and again, Paul an Apostle 2'cor.i by the will of God. ORIGEN ; Here too Valentinus errs, *• . saying, that the Word supplied to the Creator the cause of torn. ii. the creation of the world6. If this interpretation is true, it c> 8* should have been written that all things had their existence from the Word through the Creator, not contrariwise, through the Word from the Creator. And without him was not any thing made. CHRYS. That you may not suppose, when he says, All things Chrys. were made by Him, that he meant only the things Moses had * spoken of, he seasonably brings in, And without Him was not any thing made, nothing, that is, cognizable either by the senses, or the understanding. Or thus ; Lest you should suspect the sentence, All things were made by Him, to refer to the miracles which the other Evangelists had related, he adds, and without Him was not any thing made. HILARY ;Hilar. Or thus; That all things were made by him, is pronouncing deTr'in. c. 18. d The text of Aug. has et Dei COD- e rov -rn\i otlrw -rn^ovra. rvs yiviffius ditorem, perhaps it should be, et Deo TOV xaffftov rw ^nptou^yu. Origen is contrarium, (as before Patricontrarium.) speaking of Heracleon, a disciple of Theoph. has avnVsa». Valentinus. 14 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. too much, it may be said. There is an Unbegotteii Who is made of none, and there is the Son Himself begotten from Him Who is Unbegotteii. The Evangelist however again implies the Author, when he speaks of Him as Associated ; saying, without Him was not any thing made. This, that nothing was made without Him, I understand to mean the Son's not being alone, for ' by whom' is one thing, ( not with- Orig. out whom' another. ORIGEN: Or thus, that thou mightest indTv!" not think that the things made by the Word had a separate loc. existence, and were not contained in the Word, he says, and without Him was not any thing made: that is, not any thing was made externally of Him ; for He encircles all Aug. things, as the Preserver of all things. AUG. Or, by saying, Test^ without Him was not any thing made, he tells us not to N. V. suspect Him in any sense to be a thing made. For how can He be a thing made, when God, it is said, made nothing Orig. without Him ? ORIGEN ; If all things were made by the Word, m Joh. an(j jn tjje number Of an things is wickedness, and the whole torn. n. . c. 7. influx of sin, these too were made by the Word ; which is false. Now ' nothing' and ' a thing which is not,' mean the same. And the Apostle seems to call wicked things, things which Bom. 4, are not, God calleth those things which be not, as though they were. All wickedness then is called nothing, forasmuch as it is made without the Word. Those who say however that the devil is not a creature of God, err. In so far as he is the devil, he is not a creature of God ; but he, whose character it is to be the devil, is a creature of God. It is as if we should say a murderer is not a creature of God, when, so far as he is Aug. in a man, he is a creature of God. AUG. For sin was not made tract. i. by Him; for it is manifest that sin is nothing, and that men c- 13' become nothing when they sin. Nor was an idol made by the Word. It has indeed a sort of form of man, and man himself was made by the Word ; but the form of man in an i Cor. 8, idol was not made by the Word: for it is written, we know that an idol is nothing. These then were not made by the Word; but whatever things were made naturally, the whole universe, were; every creature from an angel to a worm. Orig. ORIGEN ; Valentinus excludes from the things made by the torn. n. YVord, all that were made in the ages which he believes to have existed before the Word. This is plainly false ; inasmuch VER. 4. ST. JOHN. 15 as the things which he accounts divine are thus excluded from the "all things," and what he deems wholly corrupt are properly ' all things !' AUG. The folly of those men is not to be listened Aug. de to, who think nothing is to be understood here as something, j^jU™ because it is placed at the end of the sentence1 : as if it made 25. any difference whether it was said, without Him nothing was gate " made, or, without Him was made nothing. ORIGEN ; If ( the Orig. word' be taken for that which is in each man, inasmuch as it J,0™' " was implanted in each by the Word, which was in the begin ning, then also, we commit nothing without this 'word' [reason] taking this word ' nothing' in a popular sense. For the Apostle says that sin was dead without the law, but when the commandment came, sin revived ; for sin is not imputed when there is no law. But neither was there sin, when there was no Word, for our Lord says, If I had not come and spoken j0hn is, to them, they had not had sin. For every excuse is with-22' drawn from the sinner, if, with the Word present, and enjoin ing what is to be done, he refuses to obey Him. Nor is the Word to be blamed on this account; any more than a mas ter, whose discipline leaves no excuse open to a delinquent pupil on the ground of ignorance. All things then were made by the Word, not only the natural world, but also whatever is clone by those acting without reason. Vulg. quod factum 4. In him was life. ?stin. ipso vita erat. BEDE; The Evangelist having said that every creature wasBedein made by the Word, lest perchance any one might think that1 Joh' His will was changeable, as though He willed on a sudden to make a creature, which from eternity he had not made; he took care to shew that, though a creature was made in time, in the Wisdom of the Creator it had been from eternity arranged what and when He should create. AUG. The Aug. in passage can be read thus: What ivas made in Him was life1. i.°c.'i6, Therefore the whole universe is life: for what was there not1^ i "V"ulf?. made in Him ? He is the Wisdom of God, as is said, In ps. 104. Wisdom hast Thou made them all. All things therefore are made in Him, even as they are by Him. But, if whatever was made in Him is life, the earth is life, a stone is life. We must not interpret it so unsoundly, lest the sect of the 16 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. Manicheans creep in upon us, and say, that a stone has life, and that a wall has life; for they do insanely assert so, and when reprehended or refuted, appeal as though to Scripture, and ask, why was it said, That which was made In Him was life? Read the passage then thus: make the stop after What ivas made, and then proceed, In Him was life. The earth was made ; but, the earth itself which was made is not life. In the Wisdom of God however there is spiritually a certain Reason after which the earth is made. This is Lifef. A chest in workmanship is not life, a chest in art is, inas much as the mind of the workman lives wherein that original pattern exists. And in this sense the Wisdom of God, by Which all things are made, containeth in art ' all things which are made, according to that art.' And therefore what ever is made, is not in itself life, but is life in Him. Origen. ORIGEN; It may also be divided thus: That which was S^v" made in him; and then, was life ; the sense being, that all loc. ante things that were made by Him and in Him, are life in Him, and are one in Him. They were, that is, in Him; they exist as the cause, before they exist in themselves as effects. If thou ask how and in what manner all things which were made by the Word subsist in Him vitally, immutably, causally, take some examples from the created world. See how that all things within the arch of the world of sense have their causes simultaneously and harmoniously subsisting in that sun which is the greatest luminary of the world : how multi tudinous crops of herbs and fruits are contained in single seeds: how the most complex variety of rules, in the art of the artificer, and the mind of the director, are a living unit, how an infinite number of lines coexist in one point. Con template these several instances, and thou wilt be able as it were on the wings of physical science, to penetrate with thy intellectual eye the secrets of the Word, and as far as is allowed to a human understanding, to see how all things f The passage continues thus in the ence by workmanship. The chest is Tract. " I will explain my meaning, then first in workmanship ; but does it A workman makes a chest. He first cease to be in art ? there it remains has that chest in his art; for otherwise still, and there it will continue, the he could not make it. The chest how- pattern of other chests, when the first ever does not exist in his art, as a visible one has rotted. Mark the dis- visible chest ; it exists there invisibly, tinction between a chest in art, and a and is then brought into visible exist- chest in workmanship. A chest," &c. VER. 4. ST. JOHN. 17 which were made by the Word, live in Him, and were made in Him. HILARY; Or it can be understood thus. In that he had said, without Him was not any thing made, one might have been perplexed, and have asked, Was then any thing made by another, which yet was not made without Him? if so, then though nothing is made without, all things are not made by Him : it being one thing to make, another to be with the maker. On this account the Evangelist declares what it was which was not made without Him, viz. what was made in Him. This then it was which was not made without Him, viz. what was made in Him. And that which was made in Him, was also made by Him. For all things were created in Him and by Him. Now things were made in Him, because He was born God the Creator. And for this reason also things that were made in Him, were not made without Him, viz. that God, in that He was born, was life, and He who was life, was not made life after being born. Nothing then which was made in Him, was made without Him, because He was life, in Whom they were made; because God Who was born of God was God, not after, but in that He was bornh. CHRYS. Or to give an-Chrys. other explanation. We will not put the stop at without Him [iv.] in' was not any thing made, as the heretics do. For they wishing Joan- to prove the Holy Ghost a creature, read, That which was made in Him, was life. But this cannot be so understood. For first, this was not the place for making mention of the Holy Ghost. But let us suppose it was; let us take the passage for the present according to their reading, we shall see that it leads to a difficulty. For when it is said, That which was made in Him, was life ; they say the life spoken of is the Holy Ghost. But this life is also light ; for the Evangelist proceeds, The life was the light of men. Where fore according to them, he calls the Holy Ghost the light of all men. But the Word mentioned above, is what he here calls consecutively, God, and Life, and Light. Now the Word was made flesh. It follows that the Holy Ghost is in carnate, not the Son. Dismissing then this reading, we adopt a more suitable one, with the following meaning : All things h i. e. the Son ever being what He Creator, in that He was, and always is, in that He is, " Living of Living, equally the Creator, and so of all things, Perfect of Perfect," not [as man] re- because what He was, He was always, ceiving subsequently, He was the in that He was. 1$ GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I, were made by Him, and without Him was not any tinny made which was made : there we make a stop, and begin a fresh sentence : In Him was life. Without Him it:as not any thing made which was made ; i. e. which could be made. You see how by this short addition, he removes any difficulty which might follow. For by introducing without Him was not any tiring made, and adding, which was made, he in cludes all things invisible, and excepts the Holy Spirit : for - the Spirit cannot be made. To the mention of creation, succeeds that of providence. In Him teas life1. As a fountain which produces vast depths of water, and yet is nothing di minished at the fountain head ; so worketh the Only-Begotten. How great soever His creations be, He Himself is none the less for them. By the word life here is meant not only creation, but that providence by which the things created are preserved. But when you are told that in Him was life, do John 5, not suppose Him compounded ; for, as the Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have life in Him self. As then you would not call the Father compounded, so Orig. neither should you the Son. ORIGEN; Or thus: Our Saviour 13." ' ' is said to be some things not for Himself, but for others ; others again, both for Himself and others. When it is said then, That which was made in Him was life; we must enquire whether the life is for Himself and others, or for others only; and if for others, for whom ? Now the Life and the Light are both the same Person: He is the light of men : He is therefore their life. The Saviour is called Life here, not to Himself, but to others; whose Light He also is. This life is inseparable from the Word, from the time it is added on to it. For Reason or the Word must exist before in the soul, cleansing it from sin, till it is pure enough to receive the life, which is thus ingrafted or inborn in every one who renders himself fit to receive the Word of God. Hence ob serve, that though the Word itself in the beginning was not made, the Beginning never having been without the Word; yet the life of men was not always in the Word. This life of men was made, in that It was the light of men; and 1 rov 6- And the life was the light of men. THEOPHYL. He had said, In him was life, that you might Theoph. not suppose that the Word was without life. Now he shews111 that that life is spiritual, and the light of all reasonable creatures. And the life was the light of men: i. e. not sensible, but intellectual light, illuminating the very soul. AUG. Life of itself gives illumination to men, but to cattle Aug. in not: for they have not rational souls, by which to discern j °c" jg'. wisdom: whereas man, being made in the image of God, has a rational soul, by which he can discern wisdom. Hence that life, by which all things are made, is light, not however of all animals whatsoever, but of men. THEOPHYL. He saith not, the Light of the Jews only, but of all men : for all of us, in so far as we have received intellect and reason, from that Word which created us, are said to be illuminated by Him. For the reason which is given to us, and which constitutes us the reasonable beings we are, is a light directing us what to do, and what not to do. ORIGEN ; We must not omit to notice, Orig. that he puts the life before the light of men. For it would nonocc- be a contradiction to suppose a being without life to be illuminated; as if life were an addition to illumination. But torn. ii. to proceed: if the life was the light of men, meaning men0' only, Christ is the light and the life of men only ; an heretical supposition. It does not follow then, when a thing is predicated of any, that it is predicated of those only ; for of God it is written, that He is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob ; and yet He is not the God of those fathers" only. In the same way, the light of men is not excluded from being the light of others as well. Some moreover contend fromc. 17. v uvfyiuiruv KKTK the empire of death is dissolved; a light having shone upon us, there is darkness no longer : but there remaineth ever a life which death, a light which darkness cannot over come. Whence he continues, And the light shineth in dark ness : by darkness meaning death and error, for sensible light does not shine in darkness, but darkness must be re moved first; whereas the preaching of Christ shone forth amidst the reign of error, and caused it to disappear, and Christ by dying changed death into life, so overcoming it, that, those who were already in its grasp, were brought back again. Forasmuch then as neither death nor error hath overcome his light, which is every where conspicuous, shining forth by its own strength ; therefore he adds, And Orig. the darkness comprehended it not m. ORIGEN ; As the light torn. ii. f . , . . . 1 . -11 c. 20. ot men is a word expressing two spiritual things, so is dark ness also. To one who possesses the light, we attribute both the doing the deeds of the light, and also true understanding, inasmuch as he is illuminated by the light of knowledge : and, on the other hand, the term darkness we apply both to unlawful acts, and also to that knowledge, which seems such, but is not. Now as the Father is light, and in Him is no darkness at all, so is the Saviour also. Yet, inasmuch as he underwent the similitude of our sinful flesh, it is not incor rectly said of Him, that in Him there was some darkness; for He took our darkness upon Himself, in order that He might dissipate it. This Light therefore, which was made the life of man, shines in the darkness of our hearts, when the prince of this darkness wars with the human race. This Light the darkness persecuted, as is clear from what our Saviour and His children suffer; the darkness fighting against k Nicolai omits this clause, as not that life which is received by creation, being Origen's, nor fitting in with but that perpetual and immortal life what precedes and substitutes, "which which is prepared for us by the Provi- is afterwards followed by the word of denceof God." Life having, &c. knowledge, &c." m j. e. could not get hold of it ; for 1 Nicolai inserts from S. Chrys., in Chrysostom adds, it is too strong to be order to make the connection clear, contended with. " The word 'life' means here not only VER. 6, 7, 8. ST. JOHN. 23 the children of light. But, forasmuch as God takes up the cause, they do not prevail; nor do they apprehend the light, for they are either of too slow a nature to overtake the light's quick course, or, waiting for it to come up to them, they are put to flight at its approach. We should bear in mind, however, that darkness is not always used in a bad sense, but sometimes in a good, as in Psalm xvii. He made darkness His ¥$> is, secret place : the things of God being unknown and incompre hensible. This darkness then I will call praiseworthy, since it tends toward light, and lays hold on it: for, though it were darkness before, while it was not known, yet it is turned to light and knowledge in him who has learned. AUG. A certain Platonist once said, that the beginning of this Aug.de Gospel ought to be copied in letters of gold, and placed Dei,l'.x. in the most conspicuous place in every church. BEDE ; c; 29- The other Evangelists describe Christ as born in time ; Bed'e, John witnesseth that He was in the beginning, saying, m loc< In the beginning was the Word. The others describe His sudden appearance among men ; he witnesseth that He was ever with God, saying, And the Word was with God. The others prove Him very man ; he very God, saying, And the Word was God. The others exhibit Him as man conversing with men for a season ; he pronounces Him God abiding with God in the beginning, saying, The Same was in the beginning with God. The others relate the great deeds which He did amongst men ; he that God the Father made every creature through Him, saying, All things were made by Him, and without Him was not any thing made. 6. There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. 7. The same came for a witness, to bear witness of the Light, that all men through him might believe. 8. He was not that Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light. AUG. What is said above, refers to the Divinity of Christ. Aug. He came to us in the form of man, but man in such sense, as c*2*' that the G odhead was concealed within Him. And therefore •24 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. there was sent before a great man, to declare by his witness that He was more than man. And who was this ? He was a man. THEOPHYL. Not an Angel, as many have held. Aug. The Evangelist here refutes such a notion. AUG. And how Tr' "* could he declare the truth concerning God, unless he were Chrys. sent from God. CHRYS. After this esteem nothing that he rvTc'Vi 'says as human; for he speaketh not his own, but his that sent him. And therefore the Prophet calls him a messenger, Mai. 3, I send My messenger, for it is the excellence of a messenger, to say nothing of his own. But the expression, was sent, does Isai. 6, not mean his entrance into life, but to his office. As Esaias was L sent on his commission, not from any place out of the world, but from where he saw the Lord sitting upon His high and lofty throne ; in like manner John was sent from the desert John i, to baptize ; for he says, He that sent me to baptize with water ; the same said unto me, Upon Whom thou shall see the Spirit descending, and remaining on Him, the same is He which Aug. baptizcth with the Holy Ghost. AUG. What was he called ? whose name was John? ALCUIN. That is, the grace of God, or one in whom is grace, who by his testimony first made known to the world the grace of the New Testament, that is, Christ. Or John may be taken to mean, to whom it is given : because that through the grace of God, to him it was given, not only to herald, but also to baptize the King of kings. Aug. AUG. Wherefore came he ? The same came for a witness, to c.1*).11 bear witness of the Light. ORIGEN ; Some try to undo the Ol*&- testimonies of the Prophets to Christ, by saying that the Son 28. of God had no need of such witnesses; the wholesome words which He uttered and His miraculous acts being sufficient to produce belief; just as Moses deserved belief for his speech and goodness, and wanted no previous witnesses. To this we may reply, that, where there are a number of reasons to make people believe, persons are often impressed by one kind of proof, and not by another, and God, Who for the sake of all men became man, can give them many reasons for belief in Him. And with respect to the doctrine of the Incarnation, certain it is that some have been forced by the Prophetical writings into an admiration of Christ by the fact of so many prophets having, before His advent, fixed the place of His nativity ; and by other proofs of the VKR. 6, 7, 8. ST. JOHN. 25 same kind. It is to be remembered too, that, though the display of miraculous powers might stimulate the faith of those who lived in the same age with Christ, they might, in the lapse of time, fail to do so ; as some of them might even get to be regarded as fabulous. Prophecy and miracles together are more convincing than simply past miracles by themselves. We must recollect too that men receive honour themselves from the witness which they bear to God. He deprives the Prophetical choir of immeasurable honour, whoever denies that it was their office to bear witness to Christ. John when he comes to bear witness to the light, follows in the train of those who went before him. CHRYS. Not because the light Chrys. wanted the testimony, but for the reason which John him- vi.°[>.] self gives, viz. that all might believe on Him. For as Heinjoh' put on flesh to save all men from death ; so He sent before Him a human preacher, that the sound of a voice like their own, might the readier draw men to Him. BEDE; He saith not, Bed. in that all men should believe in him ; for, cursed be the man j^ ^ that trusteth in man ; but, that all men through him might5- believe ; i. e. by his testimony believe in the Light. THE- OPHYL. Though some however might not believe, he is not accountable for them. When a man shuts himself up in a dark room, so as to receive no light from the sun's rays, he is the cause of the deprivation, not the sun. In like manner John was sent, that all men might believe ; but if no such result followed, he is not the cause of the failure. CHRYS. Foras- Chrys. much however as with us, the one who witnesses, is com-in°joh!" monly a more important, a more trustworthy person, than the c- *• one to whom he bears witness, to do away with any such notion in the present case the Evangelist proceeds ; He was not that Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light, If this were not his intention, in repeating the words, to bear witness of the Light, the addition would be superfluous, and rather a verbal repetition, than the explanation of a truth. THEOPHYL. But it will be said, that we do not allow John or any of the saints to be or ever to have been light. The difference is this : If we call any of the saints light, we put light without the article. So if asked whether John is light, without the article, thou niayest allow without hesitation that he is : if with the article, thou allow it not. For he is not 26 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. very, original, light, but is only called so, on account of his partaking of the light, which cometh from the true Light. 9. That was the true Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. Aug. AUG. What Light it is to which John bears witness, he Tr iT*1 snews himself, saying, That was the true Light. CHRYS. Or Chrys. thus ; Having said above that John had come, and was sent, in Joan, to bear witness of the Light, lest any from the recent coming vii. [vi.] of f^g witness, should infer the same of Him who is witnessed to, the Evangelist takes us back to that existence which is Aug. beyond all beginning, saying, That was the true Light. AUG. inJoh'.§.' Wherefore is there added, true? Because man enlightened ?• is called light, but the true Light is that which lightens. For our eyes are called lights, and yet, without a lamp at night, or the sun by day, these lights are open to no purpose. Wherefore he adds : which lighteneth every man : but if every man, then John himself. He Himself then enlightened the person, by whom He wished Himself to be pointed out. And just as we may often, from the reflexion of the sun's rays on some object, know the sun to be risen, though we cannot look at the sun itself; as even feeble eyes can look at an illuminated wall, or some object of that kind: even so, those to whom Christ came, being too weak to behold Him, He threw His rays upon John; John confessed the illumination, and so the Illuminator Himself was discovered. It is said, that cometh into the 'world. Had man not departed from Him, he had not had to be enlightened ; but therefore is he to be here enlightened, because he departed thence, when Theoph. he might have been enlightened. THEOPHYL. Let the Mani- chean blush, who pronounces us the creatures of a dark and malignant creator : for we should never be enlightened, were Chrys. we not the children of the true Light. CHRYS. Where are those .too, who deny Him to be very God? We see here that He is called very Light. But if He lighteneth every man that cometh into the world, how is it that so many have gone on without light ? For all have not known the worship of Christ. The answer is: He only enlighteneth every man, so far as pertains to Him. If men shut their eyes, and will not VER. 10. ST. JOHN 27 receive the rays of this light, their darkness arises not from the fault of the light, but from their own wickedness, inas much as they voluntarily deprive themselves of the gift of grace. For grace is poured out upon all ; and they, who will not enjoy the gift, may impute it to their own blindness. AUG. Or the words, lighteneth every man, may be under- Aug. stood to mean, not that there is no one who is not enlightened, but that no one is enlightened except by Him. BEDE ; In- et. Se cluding both natural and divine wisdom; for as no one cani.c.xxv. exist of himself, so no one can be wise of himself. ORIGEN ; Orig. Or thus : We must not understand the words, lighteneth every ?0d™; 2' man that cometh into the world, of the growth from hidden loc. seeds to organized bodies, but of the entrance into the invisi ble world, by the spiritual regeneration and grace, which is given in Baptism. Those then the true Light lighteneth, who come into the world of goodness, not those who rush into the world of sin. THEOPHYL. Or .thus: The intellect Theoph. which is given in us for our direction, and which is called10 natural reason, is said here to be a light given us by God. But some by the ill use of their reason have darkened themselves. 10. He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world knew him not. AUG. The Light which lighteneth every man that cometh Aug. into the world, came here in the flesh; because while Hejjj^j was here in His Divinity alone, the foolish, blind, and un- c. 8. righteous could not discern Him ; those of whom it is said above, The darkness comprehended it not. Hence the text ; He was in the world. ORIGEN ; For as, when a person Orig. leaves off speaking, his voice ceases to be, arid vanishes ; so P0™^. if the Heavenly Father should cease to speak His Word, the loc. effect of that Word, i. e. the universe which is created in the Word, shall cease to exist. AUG. You must not suppose, Aug. however, that He was in the world in the same sense in which c> j0." the earth, cattle, men, are in the world; but in the sense in which an artificer controls his own work ; whence the text, And the world was made by Him. Nor again did He make it after the manner of an artificer ; for whereas an artificer is 28 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. external to what he fabricates, God pervades the world, carrying on the work of creation in every part, and never absent from any part : by the presence of His Majesty He both makes and controls what is made. Thus He was in the Chrys. world, as He by Whom the world was made. CHRYS. And in Joan, again, because He was in the world, but not coeval with the vllltC>1- world, for this cause he introduced the words, and the world was made by Him: thus taking you back again to the eternal existence of the Only-Begotten. For when we are told that the whole of creation was made by Him, we must be very dull not to acknowledge that the Maker existed before the Theoph.work. THEOPHYL. Here he overthrows at once the insane notion of the Manichsean0, who says that the world is the work of a malignant creature, and the opinion of the Arian, that Aug. the Son of God is a creature. AUG. But what meaneth this, Joar^ii The world was made by Him ? The earth, sky, and sea, and c. 11. all that are therein, are called the world. But in another sense, the lovers of the world are called the world, of whom he says, And the world knew Him not. For did the sky, or Angels, not know their Creator, Whom the very devils con fess, Whom the whole universe has borne witness to ? Who then did not know Him ? Those who, from their love of the world, are called the world ; for such live in heart in the world, while those who do not love it, have their body in the Phil. 3, world, but their heart in heaven ; as saith the Apostle, our OA conversation is in heaven. By their love of the world, such men merit being called by the name of the place where they live. And just as in speaking of a bad house, or good house, we do not mean praise or blame to the walls, but to the inhabitants ; so when we talk of the world, we mean those Chrys. who live there in the love of it. CHRYS. But they who were viii. c*.8. the friends of God, knew Him even before His presence in the body ; whence Christ saith below, Your father Abraham re joiced to see My day. When the Gentiles then interrupt us with the question, Why has He come in these last times to work our salvation, having neglected us so long? we reply, that He was in the world before, superintending what He had made, and was known to all who were worthy of Him; and that, if the world knew Him not, those of whom the world ° So Theoph. Other copies have u of Marcion." VER. 11 13. ST. JOHN. 29 was not worthy knew Him. The reason follows, why the world knew Him not. The Evangelist calls those men the world, who are tied to the world, and savour of worldly things ; for there is nothing that disturbs the mind so much, as this melting with the love of present things. 11. He came unto his own, and his own received him not. 12. But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name : 13. Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. CHRYS. When He said that the world knew Him not, he Chrys. referred to the times of the old dispensation, but what follows j0^ " has reference to the time of his preaching; He came unto **•*• his own. AUG. Because all things were made by Him. THEO- Aug. PHYL. By his own, understand either the world, or Judrea, 1r^r^r?an> which He had chosen for His inheritance. CHRYS. He came Chrys. then unto His own, not for His own good, but for the good ^n™"i2 of others. But whence did He Who fills all things, and is every where present, come ? He came out of condescension to us, though in reality He had been in the world all along. But the world not seeing Him, because it knew Him not, He deigned to put on flesh. And this manifestation and conde scension is called His advent. But the merciful God so con trives His dispensations, that we may shine forth in propor tion to our goodness, and therefore He will not compel, but invites men, by persuasion and kindness, to come of their own accord : and so, when He came, some received Him, and others received Him not. He desires not an unwilling and forced service; for no one who comes unwillingly devotes himself wholly to Him. Whence what follows, And his own received him not. He here calls the Jews His own, as being Hom.ix. his peculiar people ; as indeed are all men in some sense, ^U1-J le being made by Him. And as above, to the shame of our common nature, he said, that the world which was made by Him, knew not its Maker : so here again, indignant at the in- 30 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. gratitude of the Jews, he brings a heavier charge, viz. that His .own received Him not. AUG. But if none at all received, !? i2.an none wiM be saved. For no one will be saved, but he who received Christ at His coming ; and therefore he adds, As Chrys. many as received Him. CHRYS. Whether they be bond or in°Joan.free? Greek or Barbarian, wise or unwise, women or men, the x. [ix.] young or the aged, all are made meet for the honour, which the Evangelist now proceeds to mention. To them gave He Aug. power to become the sons of God. AUG. O amazing goodness ! "He was born the Only Son, yet would not remain so; but grudged not to admit joint heirs to His inheritance. Nor was Chrys. this narrowed by many partaking of it. CHRYS. He saith not ?°fix1 ^at ^e ma(^e them the sons of God, but gave them power to 2. become the sons of God : shewing that there is need of much care, to preserve the image, which is formed by our adoption in Baptism, untarnished: and shewing at the same time also that no one can iake this power from us, except we rob ourselves of it. Now, if the delegates of worldly govern ments have often nearly as much power as those governments themselves, much more is this the case with us, who derive our dignity from God. But at the same time the Evangelist wishes to shew that this grace comes to us of our own will and endeavour : that, in short, the operation of grace being- supposed, it is in the power of our free will to make us the sons of God. THEOPHYL. Or the meaning is, that the most perfect sonship will only be attained at the resurrection, as Kom.8,saith the Apostle, Waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body. He therefore gave us the power to become the sons of God, i. e. the power of obtaining this Chrys. grace at some future time. CHRYS. And because in the ^om'x' matter of these ineffable benefits, the giving of grace belongs to God, but the extending of faith to man, He subjoins, even to those who believe on his name. Why then declarest thou not, John, the punishment of those who received Him not? Is it because there is no greater punishment than that, when the power of becoming the sons of God is offered to men, they should not become such, but voluntarily deprive themselves of the dignity ? But besides this, inextinguishable Aug.Tr. fire awaits all such, as will appear clearly farther on. AUG. • 14* To be made then the sons of God, and brothers of Christ, VER. 14. ST. JOHN. 31 they must of course be born ; for if they are not born, how can they be sons ? Now the sons of men are born of flesh and blood, and the will of man, and the embrace of wedlock; but how these are born, the next words declare: Not of bloods1:, that is, the male's and the female's. Bloods is not H| «<>«•• correct Latin, but as it is plural in the Greek, the translator™" preferred to put it so, though it be not strictly grammatical, at the same time explaining the word in order not to offend the weakness of one's hearers. BEDE ; It should be understood that in holy Scripture, blood in the plural number, has the signification of sin : thus in the Psalms, Deliver me from blood- Ps- 51> guiltiness*. AUG. In that which follows, Nor of the will 0/*Aug. the flesh, nor of the will of man, the flesh is put for theTr14* female; because, when she was made out of the rib, Adam said, This is now bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh. Gen. 2, The flesh therefore is put for the wife, as the spirit some times is for the husband ; because that the one ought to govern, the other to obey. For what is there worse than an house, where the woman hath rule over the man ? But these that we speak of are born neither of the will of the flesh, nor the will of man, but of God. BEDE; The carnal birth of men derives its origin from the embrace of wedlock, but the spiritual is dispensed by the grace of the Holy Spirit. CHRYS. The Evangelist makes this declaration, that being Chrys. taught the idleness and inferiority of our former birth, which 5£?sX" is through blood, and the will of the flesh, and understanding the loftiness and nobleness of the second, which is through grace, we might hence receive great knowledge, worthy of being bestowed by him who begat us, and after this shew forth much zeal. 14. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us. AUG. Having said, Born of God; to prevent surprise and Aug. trepidation at so great, so apparently incredible a grace, r'1Kl ' as that men should be born of God; to assure us, he says, And the Word was made flesh. Why marvellest thou then that men are born of God ? Know that God Himself was born of man. CHRYS. Or thus, After saying that they P Plur. in the Vulg. as in the Heb. 3*2 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. were born of God, who received Him, he sets forth the cause of this honour, viz. the Word being made flesh, God's own Son was made the son of man, that he might make the sons of men the sons of God. Now when thou nearest that the Word was made Jlesh, be not disturbed, for He did not change His substance into flesh, which it were indeed impious to suppose ; but remaining what He was, took upon Him the form of a servant. But as there are some who say, that the whole of the incarnation was only in appearance, to refute such a blasphemy, he used the expression, ivas made, meaning to represent not a conversion of substance, but an assumption of real flesh. But if they say, God is omnipotent; why then could He not be changed into flesh? we reply, that a change from an unchangeable nature is Aug. a contradiction. AUG. As our wordq becomes the bodily .c.20.' voice, by its assumption of that voice, as a means of developing xv (xi-) itself externally ; so the Word of God was made flesh, by assuming flesh, as a means of manifesting Itself to the world. And as our word is made voice, yet is not turned into voice; so the Word of God was made flesh, but never turned into flesh. It is by assuming another nature, not by consuming themselves in it, that our word is made voice, and the Word, P- iii- flesh. Ex GESTIS CONC. EPH. The discourse which we utter, Theod. which we use in conversation with each other, is incorporeal, Ancyr. imperceptible, impalpable ; but clothed in letters and cha- Dom. racters, it becomes material, perceptible, tangible. So too the Word of God, which was naturally invisible, becomes visible, and that comes before us in tangible form, which was by nature in Joan, incorporeal. ALCUIN. When we think how the incorporeal ]>1' soul is joined to the body, so as that of two is made one man, we too shall the more easily receive the notion of the incorporeal Divine substance being joined to the soul in the body, in unity of person ; so as that the Word is not turned into flesh, nor the flesh into the Word; just as the soul is not turned into body, nor the body into soul. Theoph. THEOPHYL. Apollinarius of Laodicea raised a heresy upon this text; saying, that Christ had flesh only, not a rational Aug. soul; in the place of which His divinity directed and con- Serin. trolled His body. AUG. If men are disturbed however by its 1 See above, p. 1-3. VER. 13. ST. JOHN. 33 being said that the Word was made flesh, without mention of a soul; let them know that the flesh is put for the whole man, the part for the whole, by a figure of speech; as in the Psalms, Unto thee shall all flesh come; and again Ps.65,2. in Romans, By the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be Rom. 3, justified. In the same sense it is said here that the Word was made flesh ; meaning that the Word was made man. THEOPHYL. The Evangelist intends by making mention of Theoph. the flesh, to shew the unspeakable condescension of God,m and lead us to admire His compassion, in assuming for our salvation, what was so opposite and incongenial to His nature, as the flesh : for the soul has some propinquity to God. Tf the Word, however, was made flesh, and assumed not at the same time a human soul, our souls, it would follow, would not be yet restored : for what He did not assume, He could not sanctify. What a mockery then, when the soul first sinned, to assume and sanctify the flesh only, leaving the weakest part untouched ! This text overthrows Nestorius, who asserted that it was not the very Word, even God, Who the Self-same was made man, being conceived of the sacred blood of the Virgin : but that the Virgin brought forth a man endowed with every kind of virtue, and that the Word of God was united to him : thus making out two sons, one born of the Virgin, i. e. man, the other born of God, that is, the Son of God, united to that man by grace, and relation, and lover. In opposition to him the Evangelist declares, that the very Word was made Man, not that the Word fixing upon a righteous man united Himself to him. CYRIL; The Word^rilj^d uniting to Himself a body of flesh animated with a rational 8. soul, substantially, was ineffably and incomprehensibly made Man, and called the Son of man, and that not according to the will only, or good-pleasure, nor again by the assumption of the Person alone. The natures are different indeed which are brought into true union, but He Who is of both, Christ the Son, is One ; the difference of the natures, on the r The union of the two Natures in of the Manhood, as united externally, our Lord, xa.ro, ff^ifiv, or Tss ; but throughout guards against Sabellianism. S. Hilary in writing against the Avians, Ben. VER. 14. ST. JOHN. 35 CHRYS. Having said that we are made the sons of God, Chrya. and in no other way than because the Word was made flesh; ^T^i i he mentions another gift, And we saw His glory. Which i- glory we should not have seen, had He not, by His alliance with humanity, become visible to us. For if they could not endure to look on the glorified face of Moses, but there was need of a veil, how could soiled and earthly creatures, like ourselves, have borne the sight of undisguised Divinity, which is not vouchsafed even to the higher powers themselves. AUG. Or thus ; in that the Word was made flesh and dwelt Aug. in among us, His birth became a kind of ointment to anoint the j°^ eyes of our heart, that we might through His humanity discern c- 16- His majesty; and therefore it follows, And we saw His glory. No one could see His glory, who was not healed by the humility of the flesh. For there had flown upon man's eye as it were dust from the earth : the eye had been diseased, and earth was sent to heal it again ; the flesh had blinded thee, the flesh restores thee. The soul by consenting to carnal affections had become carnal ; hence the eye of the mind had been blinded : then the physician made for thee oint ment. He came in such wise, as that by the flesh He destroyed the corruption of the flesh. And thus the Word was made flesh, that thou mightest be able to say, We saw His glory. CHRYS. He subjoins, As of the Only-Begotten Chrys. of the Father: for many prophets, as Moses, Elijah, and others, workers of miracles, had been glorified, and Angels also whoxii-[xi-J appeared unto men, shining with the brightness belong ing to their nature; Cherubim and Seraphim too, who were seen in glorious array by the prophets. But the Evangelist withdrawing our minds from these, and raising them above all nature, and every preeminence of fellow servants, leads us up to the summit Himself; as if he said, Not of prophet, or of any other man, or of Angel, or Archangel, or any of the higher powers, is the glory which we beheld ; but as that of the very Lord, very King, very and true Only-Begotten Son. GREG. In Scripture language as, and as it were, are some- Greg. times put not for likeness but reality ; whence the expression,1^"'] As of the Only-Begotten of the Father. CHRYS. As if hec-6-02-) said : We saw His glory, such as it was becoming and proper Horn. for the Only-Begotten and true Son to have. We have a*"^3"^ D 2 3t> GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. form of speech, like it, derived from our seeing kings always splendidly robed. When the dignity of a man's carriage is beyond description, we say, In short, he went as a king. So too John says, We saw His glory, the glory as of the Only Begotten of the Father. For Angels, when they appeared, did every thing as servants who had a Lord, but He as the Lord appearing in humble form. Yet did all creatures recognise their Lord, the star calling the Magi, the Angels the shepherds, the child leaping in the womb acknowledged Him : yea the Father bore witness to Him from heaven, and the Paraclete descending upon Him : and the very universe itself shouted louder than any trumpet, that the King of heaven had come. For devils fled, diseases were healed, the graves gave up the dead, and souls were brought out of wickedness, to the utmost height of virtue. What shall one say of the wisdom of precepts, of the virtue of heavenly laws, of the excellent institution of the angelical life ? Origen. OiiiGEN ; Full of grace and truth. Of this the meaning is two- fold. For it may be understood of the Humanity, and the Divinity of the Incarnate Word, so that the fulness of grace has reference to the Humanity, according to which Christ is the Head of the Church, and the first-born of every creature: for the greatest and original example of grace, by which man, with no preceding merits, is made God, is manifested primarily in Him. The fulness of the grace of Christ may also be understood of the Holy Spirit, whose sevenfold Is. 11,2. operation filled Christ's Humanity. The fulness of truth applies to the Divinity But if you had rather under stand the fulness of grace and truth of the New Testament, you may with propriety pronounce the fulness of the grace of the New Testament to be given by Christ, and the truth of Theoph. the legal types to have been fulfilled in Him. THEOPHYL. loo< Or, full of grace, inasmuch as His word was gracious, as saith Ps.45,3. David, Full of grace are thy lips; and truth, because what Moses and the Prophets spoke or did in figure, Christ did in reality. 15. John bare witness of him, and cried, saying, This was he of whom I spake, He that cometh after me is preferred before me, for he was before me. VER. 15. ST. JOHN. 37 ALCUIN ; He had said before that there was a man sent to bear witness ; now he gives definitely the forerunner's own testimony, which plainly declared the excellence of His Human Nature and the Eternity of His Godhead. John bare witness of Hitn. CHRYS. Or he introduces this, asChrys. if to say, Do not suppose that we bear witness to this outin°j^'an of gratitude, because we were with Him a long time, andxi»- partook of His table ; for John who had never seen Him before, 2*3. rior tarried with Him, bare witness to Him. The Evangelist repeats John's testimony many times here and there, because he was held in such admiration by the Jews. Other Evan gelists refer to the old prophets, and say, This was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet. But he introduces a loftier, and later witness, not intending to make the servant vouch for the master, but only condescending to the weakness of his hearers. For as Christ would not have been so readily received, had He not taken upon Him the form of a servant; so if he had not excited the attention of servants by the voice of a fellow-servant beforehand, there would not have been many Jews embracing the word of Christ. It follows, And cried-, that is, preached with openness, with freedom, without reservation. He did not however begin with asserting that this one was the natural only -begotten Son of God, but cried, saying, This was He of whom I spake, He that cometh after me is preferred before me, for He was before me. For as birds do not teach their young all at once to fly, but first draw them outside the nest, and after wards try them with a quicker motion ; so John did not immediately lead the Jews to high things, but began with lesser flights, saying, that Christ was better than he ; which in the mean time was no little advance. And observe how prudently he introduces his testimony ; he not only points to Christ when He appears, but preaches Him beforehand; as, This is He of whom I spake. This would prepare men's minds for Christ's coming : so that when He did come, the humility of His garb would be no impediment to His being received. For Christ adopted so humble and common an appearance, that if men had seen Him without first hearing John's testimony to His greatness, none of the things spoken of Him would have had any effect. THEOPHYL. He saith, 38 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. Who cometh after me, that is, as to the time of His birth. John was six months before Christ, according to His humanity. Chrys. CnRYS. Or this does not refer to the birth from Mary; for xiii!" Christ was born, when this was said by John; but to His [xii.] 3. coming for the work of preaching. He then saith, is made* before me; that is, is more illustrious, more honourable ; as if he said, Do not suppose me greater than He, because I came Theoph. first to preach. THEOPHYL. The Arians infer from this word1, inj{°£wthat the Son of God is not begotten of the Father, but made Aug. like any other creature. AUG. It does not mean — He was Trfs?n mac^e before I was made ; but He is preferred to me. CHRYS. Chrys. If the words, made before me, referred to His coming into xiH™' being, it was superfluous to add, For He was before me. For [xii.] 3. Wjj0 wouid be so foolish as not to know, that if He was made before him, He was before him. It would have been more correct to say, He was before me, because He was made before me. The expression then, He was made before me, must be taken in the sense of honour : only that which was to take place, he speaks of as having taken place already, after the style of the old Prophets, who commonly talk of the future as the past. 16. And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace. 17. For the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. Orig. ORIGEN; This is to be considered a continuation of the t?vi.°3.n" Baptist's testimony to Christ, a point which has escaped the \. 18. attention of many, who think that from this to, He hath declared Him, St. John the Apostle is speaking. But the idea that on a sudden, and, as it would seem, unseasonably, the discourse of the Baptist should be interrupted by a speech of the disciple's, is inadmissible. And any one, able to follow the passage, will discern a very obvious connexion here. For having said, He is preferred before me, for He was before me, he proceeds, From this I know that He is before me, because I and the Prophets who preceded me * yiyavtt. Vulg.factus. Eng. T. preferred. VER. 16, 17. ST. JOHN. 39 have received of His fulness, and grace for grace, (the second grace for the first.) For they too by the Spirit penetrated beyond the figure to the contemplation of the truth. And hence receiving, as we have done, of his fulness, we judge that the law was given by Moses, but that grace and truth were made1, by Jesus Christ — made, not given: the Father J!yi»w« : gave the law by Moses, but made grace and truth by Jesus, y^ But if it is Jesus who says below, / am the Truth, how is E- T- truth made by Jesus? We must understand however thatj0hni4, the very substantial Truth2, from which First Truth and Its J^ Image many truths are engraven on those who treat of the ax«V«« truth, was not made through Jesus Christ, or through any one; but only the truth which is in individuals, such as in Paul, e. g. or the other Apostles, was made through Jesus Christ. CHRYS. Or thus; John the Evangelist here addschrys. his testimony to that of John the Baptist, saying, dnd^^n' of his fulness have ice all received. These are not the*iy. words of the forerunner, but of the disciple ; as if he meant to say, We also the twelve, and the whole body of the faithful, both present and to come, have received of His fulness. AUG. But what have ye received ? Grace for grace. Aug. So that we are to understand that we have received a certain TrJ°^n* something from His fulness, and over and above this, grace for c. 8. grace; that we have first received of His fulness, first grace;6 and again, we have received grace for grace. What grace did we first receive? Faith: which is called grace, because it is given freely3. This is the first grace then which the3 gratis sinner receives, the remission of his sins. Again, we have grace for grace ; i. e. in stead of that grace in which we live by faith, we are to receive another, viz. life eternal: for life eternal is as it were the wages of faith. And thus as faith itself is a good grace, so life eternal is grace for grace. There was not grace in the Old Testament; for the law threatened, but assisted not, commanded, but healed not, shewed our weak ness, but relieved it not. It prepared the way however for a Physician who was about to come, with the gifts of grace and truth : whence the sentence which follows : For the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth were made by Jesus Christ. The death of thy Lord hath destroyed death, both temporal and eternal; that is the grace which was promised, 40 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. Chrys. but not contained, in the law. CHRYS. Or we have received grace for grace; that is, the new in the place of the old. XIV. [xiii.] jH0r as there is a uistice and a mstice besides, an adoption sparsim. J . . •* . . and another adoption, a circumcision and another circum cision; so is there a grace and another grace: only the one being a type, the other a reality. He brings in the words to shew that the Jews as well as ourselves are saved by grace : it being of mercy and grace that they received the law. Next, after he has said, Grace for grace, he adds something to shew the magnitude of the gift; For the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth were made by Jesus Christ. John when comparing himself with Christ above had said, He is preferred before me: but the Evangelist draws a comparison between Christ, and one much more in admiration with the Jews than John, viz. Moses. And observe his wisdom. He does not draw the comparison between the persons, but the things, contrasting grace and truth to the law: the latter of which he says was given, a word only applying to an administrator; the former made, as we should speak of a king, who does every thing by his power: though in this King it would be with grace also, because that with power He remitted all sins. Now His grace is shewn in His gift of Baptism, and our adoption by the Holy Spirit, and many other things ; but to have a better insight into what the truth is, we should study the figures of the old law: for what was to be accomplished in the New Testament, is prefigured in the Old, Christ at His Coming filling up the figure. Thus was the figure given by Moses, ^u^,-. but the truth made by Christ. AUG. Or, we may refer deTrin. J xiii. c. grace to knowledge, truth to wisdom. Amongst the events 24.(xix.) of thiie the highest grace is the uniting of man to God in One Person; in the eternal world the highest truth pertains to God the Word. 18. No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him. Grig. ORIGEN; Heracleon asserts, that this is a declaration of 1C c^sciPlc? not °f tne Baptist: an unreasonable supposition; VER. 18. ST. JOHN. 41 for if the words, Of His fulness have ice all received, are the Baptist's, does not the connexion run naturally, that he receiving of the grace of Christ, the second in the place of the first grace, and confessing that the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ; understood here that no man had seen God at any time, and that the Only Begotten, who was in the bosom of the Father, had committed this declaration of Himself to John, and all who with him had received of His fulness? For John was not the first who declared Him ; for He Himself who was before Abraham, tells us, that Abraham rejoiced to see His glory. CHRYS. Or Chrys. thus; the Evangelist after shewing the great superiority of^0^n* Christ's gifts, compared with those dispensed by Moses, xiy;> wishes in the next place to supply an adequate reason for the difference. The one being a servant was made a minister of a lesser dispensation : but the other Who was Lord, and Son of the King, brought us far higher things, being ever coexistent with the Father, and beholding Him. Then follows, No man hath seen God at any time, $-c. AUG. What is that then Aug. which Jacob said, / have seen God face to face; and thatpP^na which is written of Moses, he talked with God face to face; (Ep. and that which the prophet Isaiah saith of himself, / saw the [112.] Lord sitting upon a throne? GREG. It is plainly given us to °^32 understand here, that while we are in this mortal state, we Ex. 33. can see God only through the medium of certain images, not §Jj^' in the reality of His own nature. A soul influenced by the grace xviii. of the Spirit may see God through certain figures, but cannot c> 5™' penetrate into his absolute essence. And hence it is that Jacob, (880 who testifies that he saw God, saw nothing but an Angel: and that Moses, who talked with God face to face, says, Shew me Exod. no I o Thy way, that I may know Tliee : meaning that he ardently desired to see in the brightness of His own infinite Nature, Him Whom he had only as yet seen reflected in images. CHRYS. Chrys. If the old fathers had seen That very Nature, they would xv°m* not have contemplated It so variously, for It is in Itself simple Oiv.J and without shape; It sits not, It walks not; these are the qualities of bodies. Whence he saith through the Prophet, / have multiplied visions, and used similitudes, by ministry of the Prophets: i. e. I have condescended to them, I appeared that which I was not. For inasmuch as the Son 42 GGSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. of God was about to manifest Himself to us in actual flesh, men were at first raised to the sight of God, in such ways as Aug. allowed of their seeing Him. AUG. Now it is said, Blessed are Paulina ^ie Pure *n heart7 for they shall see God; and again, When sparsim. ffe shall appear, ice shall be like unto Him , for we shall see 8. ' Him as He is. What is the meaning then of the words here : 1 John jy0 man hath seen God af any nme 9 The reply is easy : those passages speak of God, as to be seen, not as already seen. They shall see God, it is said, not, they have seen Him: nor is it, we have seen Him, but, we shall see Him as He is. For, No man hath seen God at any time, neither in this life, nor yet in the Angelic, as He is ; in the same way in which sensible things are perceived by the bodily vision. Greg. GREG. If however any, while inhabiting this corruptible flesh, Moral. can advance to such an immeasurable height of virtue, as to be able to discern by the contemplative vision, the eternal brightness of God, their case affects not what we say. For whoever seeth wisdom, that is, God, is dead wholly to this Aug.xii.life, being no longer occupied by the love of it. AUG. For °d rtfc11 un^ess any m some sense die to this life, either by leaving the ram c. body altogether, or by being so withdrawn and alienated from carnal perceptions, that he may well not know, as the Apostle 2 Cor. says, whether he be in the body or out of the body, he cannot be earned away, and borne aloft to that vision. GREG. xviii. Some hold that in the place of bliss, God is visible in His c. 54. 90. brightness, but not in His nature. This is to indulge in over vett ... much subtlety. For in that simple and unchangeable essence, no division can be made between the nature and the bright- Aug. ness. AUG. If we say, that the text, No one A hath seen God to Paul. a£ any nme^ applies only to men; so that, as the Apostle i Tim. more plainly interprets it, Whom no man hath seen nor can see, no one is to be understood here to mean, no one of men : the question may be solved in a way not to contradict what Mat. is, our Lord says, Their Angels do always behold the face of My G." ^ Father; so that we must believe that Angels see, what no xviii. one, i. e. of men, hath ever seen. GREG. Some however c. 54. there are who conceive that not even the Angels see God. (9i.)vet. CHRYS. That very existence which is God, neither Pro- Chrys. Horn. xv. cl o&tis '• "Vulg. nemo : E. T. no man, (xiv.)l, 18. ST. JOHN. 43 phets, nor even Angels, nor yet Archangels, have seen. For enquire of the Angels; they say nothing concerning His Substance ; but sing, Glory to God in the highest , and Peace Luke 2, on earth to men of goodwill. Nay, ask even Cherubim and Seraphim ; thou wilt hear only in reply the mystic melody of devotion, and that heaven and earth are full of His glory, is. 6, 3. AUG. Which indeed is true so far, that no bodily or even Aug. to mental vision of man hath ever embraced the fulness of God ; for it is one thing to see, another to embrace the whole of what thou seest. A thing is seen, if only the sight of it be caught; but we only see a thing fully, when we have no part of it unseen, when we see round its extreme limits. CHRYS. In this complete sense only the Son and the Holy Chrys. Ghost see the Father. For how can created nature see which is uncreated ? So then no man knoweth the Father as xv; the Son knoweth Him: and hence what follows, The Only- Begotten Son, Who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him. That we might not be led by the identity of the name, to confound Him with the sons made so by grace, the article is annexed in the first place ; and then, to put an end to all doubt, the name Only- Begotten is intro duced. HILARY ; The Truth of His Nature did not seem Hii. de sufficiently explained by the name of Son, unless, in ad-vinjg dition, its peculiar force as proper to Him were expressed, so signifying its distinctness from all beside. For in that, besides Son, he calleth Him also the Only-Begotten, he cut off altogether all suspicion of adoption, the Nature of the Only-Begotten guaranteeing the truth of the name. CHRYS. Chrys. He adds, Which is in the bosom of the Father. To dwell ^v°m' in the bosom is much more than simply to see. For he who [xiv.] 2. sees simply, hath not the knowledge thoroughly of that which he sees ; but he who dwells in the bosom, knoweth every thing. When you hear then that no one knoweth the Father save the Son, do not by any means suppose that he only knows the Father more than any other, and does not know Him fully. For the Evangelist sets forth His residing in the bosom of the Father on this very account : viz. to shew us the intimate converse of the Only-Begotten, and His A coetemity with the Father. AUG. In the bosom of the Father, in Joan. i. e. in the secret Presence1 of the Father: for God hath notc. 17. ' 1 secreto 44 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. the foldc on the bosom, as we have ; nor must be imagined to sit, as we do ; nor is He bound with a girdle, so as to have a fold : but from the fact of our bosom being placed inner most, the secret Presence of the Father is called the bosom of the Father. He then who, in the secret Presence of the Father, knew the Father, the same hath declared what Fie saw. Chrys. CHRYS. But what hath He declared ? That God is one. But xv. this the rest of the Prophets and Moses proclaim : what else [xiv.] 3. have we learnt from the Son Who was in the bosom of the Father ? In the first place, that those very truths, which the others declared, were declared through the operation of the Only Begotten : in the next place, we have received a far greater doctrine from the Only Begotten ; viz. that God is a Spirit, and those who worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth ; and that God is the Father of the Only Bede Begotten. BEDE ; Farther, if the word declaredh&ve reference oc< to the past, it must be considered that He, being made man, declared the doctrine of the Trinity in unity, and how, and by what acts we should prepare ourselves for the contemplation of it. If it have reference to the future, then it means that He will declare Him, when He shall introduce His elect to Aug. the vision of His brightness. AUG. Yet have there been men, c.r'i8 '* who, deceived by the vanity of their hearts, maintained that the Father is invisible, the Son visible. Now if they call the Son visible, with respect to His connexion with the flesh, we object not ; it is the Catholic doctrine. But it is madness in them to say He was so before His incarnation ; i. e. if it be true that Christ is the Wisdom of God, and the Power of God. The Wisdom of God cannot be seen by the eye. If the human word cannot be seen by the eye, how can the Chrys. Word of God ? CHRYS. The text then, No man hath seen x\°im God at any time, applies not to the Father only, but also to [xv.] i. ihe gon: for HCj as Paul saith, is the Image of the invisible God ; but He who is the Image of the Invisible, must Himself also be invisible, 19. And this is the record of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, Who art thou ? f xo*.<7os, sinus, bosom, mean often, Ibid of the garment on the bosom. VER. 19 23. ST. JOHN. 45 20. And he confessed, and denied not; but con fessed, I am not the Christ. 2 1 . And they asked him, What then ? Art thou Elias ? And he saith, I am not. Art thou that pro phet? And he answered, No. 22. Then said they unto him, Who art thou? that we may give an answer to them that sent us. What sayest thou of thyself? 23. He said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Esaias. ORIGEN ; This is the second testimony of John the Baptist to Orig. Christ, the first began with, This is He of Whom I spake; and Jon^n" ended with, He hath declared Him. THEOPHYL. Or, after the c- 29- introduction above of John's testimony to Christ, is preferred jn io°cP. before me, the Evangelist now adds when the above testi mony was given, And this is the record of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem. ORIGEN ; Orig. The Jews of Jerusalem, as being of kin to the Baptist, who*' 7' was of the priestly stock, send Priests and Levites to ask him who he is ; that is, men considered to hold a superior rank c. 6. to the rest of their order, by God's election, and coming from that favoured above all cities, Jerusalem. Such is the reveren tial way in which they interrogate John. We read of no such proceeding towards Christ : but what the Jews did to John, John in turn does to Christ, when he asks Him, through His disciples, Art thou He that should come, or look we for'Lvk* 7, another? CHRYS. Such confidence had they in John, that ch'rys. they were ready to believe him on his own words: witness1^ Joan» how it is said, To ask him, Who art thou? AUG. Theyxvi. would not have sent, unless they had been impressed by his^^Tr lofty exercise of authority, in daring to baptize. ORIGEN ; 4. c. 3. John, as it appears, saw from the question, that the Priests jnnjoh. and Levites had doubts whether it might not be the Christ, tom- vi- who was baptizing ; which doubts however they were afraid to profess openly, for fear of incurring the charge of credulity. He wisely determines therefore first to correct their mistake, and then to proclaim the truth. Accordingly, he first of all 46 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. shews that he is not the Christ : And he confessed) and denied not; but confessed, I am not the Christ. We may add here, that at this time the people had already begun to be impressed with the idea that Christ's advent was at hand, in consequence of the interpretations which the lawyers had collected out of the sacred writings to that effect. Thus Theudas had been enabled to collect together a considerable body, on the strength of his pretending to be the Christ; and after him Judas, in the days of the taxation, had done Acts 6. the same. Such being the strong expectation of Christ's advent then prevalent, the Jews send to John, intending by the question, Who art thou ? to extract from him whether Greg, he were the Christ. GREG. He denied directly being what vii. in he was not, but he did not deny what he was : thus, by his Evang. Speaking truth, becoming a true member of Him Whose Chrys. name he had not dishonestly usurped. CHRYS. Or take this xv°™' explanation : The Jews were influenced by a kind of human [xv.] i, sympathy for John, whom they were reluctant to see made subordinate to Christ, on account of the many marks of greatness about him ; his illustrious descent in the first place, he being the son of a chief priest ; in the next, his hard training, and his contempt of the world. Whereas in Christ the contrary were apparent ; a humble birth, for which they Mat. is, reproach Him; Is not this the carpenter's son ? an ordinary way of living; a dress such as every one else wore. As John then was constantly sending to Christ, they send to him, with the view of having him for their master, and thinking to induce him, by blandishments, to confess himself Christ. They do not therefore send inferior persons to him, ministers and Herodians, as they did to Christ, but Priests and Levites ; and not of these an indiscriminate party, but those of Jeru salem, i.e. the more honourable ones; but they send them with this question, to ask, Who art thou ? not from a wish to be informed, but in order to induce him to do what I have said. John replies then to their intention, not to their interro gation : And he confessed, and denied not ; but confessed, I am not the Christ. And observe the wisdom of the Evangelist: he repeats the same thing three times, to shew John's virtue, and the malice and madness of the Jews. For it is the character of a devoted servant, not only to forbear taking to himself VEK. 19 — 23. ST. JOHN. 47 his lord's glory, but even, when numbers offer it to him, to reject it. The multitude indeed believed from ignorance that John was the Christ, but in these it was malice ; and in this spirit they put the question to him, thinking, by their blandishments to bring him over to their wishes. For unless this had been their design, when he replied, / am not the Christ^ they would have said, We did not suspect this ; we did not come to ask this. When caught, however, and dis covered in their purpose, they proceed to another question : And they asked 1dm, What then? Art Ihou Elias ? AUG. Aug. For they knew that Elias was to preach Christ ; the name of Christ not being unknown to any among the Jews ; but they c. 4. did not think that He our Lord was the Christ : and yet did not altogether imagine that there was no Christ about to come. In this way, while looking forward to the future, they mistook at the present. And he said, I am not. GREG. These words gave rise to Greg. a very different question. In another place, our Lord, when vi?™" j asked by His disciples concerning the coming of Elias, replied, If ye will receive it, this is Elias. But John says, Mat.il, / am not Elias. How is he then a preacher of the truth, if14' he agrees not with what that very Truth declares ? ORIGEN ; Grig. Some one will say that John was ignorant that he was Elias; J^0^"' as those say, who maintain, from this passage the doctrine c. 7. of a second incorporation, as though the soul took up a new body, after leaving its old one. For the Jews, it is said, asking John by the Levites and priests, whether he is Elias, suppose the doctrine of a second body to be already certain; as though it rested upon tradition, and were part of their secret system. To which question, however, John replies, / am not Elias: not being acquainted with his own prior existence. But how is it reasonable to imagine, if John were a prophet enlightened by the Spirit, and had revealed so much concerning the Father, and the Only-Begotten, that he could be so in the dark as to himself, as not to know that his own soul had once belonged to Elias? GREG. But Greg, if we examine the truth accurately, that which sounds incon-vji^ sistent, will be found not really so. The Angel told Zacha- Evang. rias concerning John, He shall go before Him in the spirit Luke 1, and power of Elias. As Elias then will preach the second17- 48 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. advent of our Lord, so John preached His first ; as the former will come as the precursor of the Judge, so the latter was made the precursor of the Redeemer. John was Elias in spirit, not in person : and what our Lord affirms of the spirit, John denies of the Person : there being a kind of propriety in this; viz. that our Lord to His disciples should speak spiritually of John, and that John, in answering the carnal multitude, prig, should speak of his body, not of his spirit. ORIGEN ; He torn. vi. answers then the Levites and Priests,/ am not, conjecturing c- 7. what their question meant : for the purport of their examina tion was to discover, not whether the spirit in both was the same, but whether John was that very Elias, who was taken up, now appearing again, as the Jews expected, without another birth1. But he whom we mentioned above as holding this doctrine of a reincorporation, will say that it is not con sistent that the Priests and Levites should be ignorant of the birth of the son of so dignified a priest as Zacharias, who was born too in his father's old age, and contrary to all human Luke 1, probabilities: especially when Luke declares, that fear came on all that dwelt round about them. But perhaps, since Elias was expected to appear before the coming of Christ near the end, they may seem to put the question figuratively, Art thou he who announcest the coming of Christ at the end of the world ? to which he answers, / am not. But there is in fact nothing strange in supposing that John's birth might not have been known to all. For as in the case of our Saviour many knew Him to be born of Mary, and yet some wrongly imagined that He was John the Baptist, or Elias, or one of the Prophets ; so in the case of John, some were not unacquainted with the fact of his being son of Zacharias, and yet some may have been in doubt whether he were not the Elias who was expected. Again, inasmuch as many prophets had arisen in Israel, but one was especially looked forward to, of whom Moses had prophesied, ^e Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee, of thy brethren, like unto me ; unto Him shall ye hearken : they ask him in the third place, not i Origen argues again against there- Apol. pro Orig. c. 10. p. 45. 46. ed, de incorporation from this same passage, la Rue. in Matt. 1. vii. and xiii. $. 1 . see Pamph. VER. 19 23. ST. JOHN. 49 simply whether he is a prophet, but with the article prefixed, Art thou that Prophet ? For every one of the prophets in succession had signified to the people of Israel that he was not the one whom Moses had prophesied of; who, like Moses, was to stand in the midst between God and man, and deliver a testament, sent from God to His disciples. They did not however apply this name to Christ, but thought that He was to be a different person ; whereas John knew that Christ was that Prophet, and therefore to this question, he answered, No. AUG. Or because John was more Au|^ than a prophet : for that the prophets announced Him afar Tr. iv. off, but John pointed Him out actually present. Then said they unto him, Wlio art thou ? that we may give an answer to them that sent us. What sayest thou of thyself? CHRYS. You see them here pressing him still moreChrys. strongly with their questions, while he on the other handxv°m> quietly puts down their suspicions, where they are untrue, [xv-l 2- and establishes the truth in their place : saying, / am the voice of one crying in the wilderness. AUG. So spoke Esaias : Au^n the prophecy was fulfilled in John the Baptist. GREG. Ye Greg. ' know that the only-begotten Son is called the Word of the ^™- 2 Father. Now we know, in the case of our own utterance, the voice first sounds, and then the word is heard. Thus John declares himself to be the voice, i. e. because he precedes the Word, and, through his ministry, the Word of the Father is heard by man. ORIGEN ; Heracleon, in his discussion prig. on John and the Prophets, infers that because the Saviour tom.vi. was the Word, and John the voice, therefore the whole of the c- 12- prophetic order was only sound. To which we reply, that, if the trumpet gives an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself for the battle ? If the voice of prophecy is nothing but sound, why does the Saviour send us to it, saying, Search John 5, the Scriptures ? But John calls himself the voice, not that crieth, but of one that crieth in the wilderness; viz. of Him Who stood and cried, If any man thirst , let him come unto John 7, Me and drink. He cries, in order that those at a distance may hear him, and understand from the loudness of the sound, the vastness of the thing spoken of. THEOPHYL. Or in loc- because he declared the truth plainly, while all who were Greg. under the law spoke obscurely. GREG. John crieth in the vii°"^ R Ev. c. 2. 50 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. wilderness, because it is to forsaken and destitute Judaea that he bears the consolatory tidings of a Redeemer. Orig. ORIGEN ; There is need of the voice crying in the wilderness, c? 10.11. tnat tne SOIU c> 3' be the husband, should unloose his shoe. Now in what character did Christ appear in the world, but as Spouse of the Holy Church ? John then very properly pronounced John 3, himself unworthy to unloose this shoe's latchet: as if he said,2 I cannot uncover the feet of the Redeemer, for I claim not the title of spouse, which I have no right to. Or the passage 54 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. may be explained in another way. We know that shoes are made out of dead animals. Our Lord then, when He came in the flesh, put on, as it were, shoes; because in His Divinity He took the flesh of our corruption, wherein we had of ourselves perished. And the latchet of the shoe, is the seal upon the mystery. John is not able to unloose the shoe's latchet ; i. e. even he cannot penetrate into the mystery of the Incarnation. So he seems to say: What wonder that He is preferred before me, Whom, being born after me, I contemplate, yet the mystery of Whose birth I comprehend not. GRIG. The place has been understood not amiss thus torn. vi. . in Joan. by a certain person1; 1 am not ot such importance, as that Hera- f r sa]rjoj' If the Lamb of God is innocent, and John is the lamb, must he not be innocent? But all men come of that stock Ps. 51, of which David sings sorrowing, Behold, I was conceived in wickedness. He then alone was the Lamb, who was not thus conceived; for He was not conceived in wickedness, nor in sin did His mother bear Him in her womb, Whom a virgin conceived, a virgin brought forth, because that in faith Orig. she conceived, and in faith received. OKIGEN ; But whereas cTs^1' nve kinds of animals are offered in the temple, three beasts of et seq. the field, a calf, a sheep, and a goat; and two fowls of the air, a turtle dove and a pigeon; and of the sheep kind three are introduced, the ram, the ewe, the lamb ; of these three he mentions only the lamb; the lamb, as we know, being offered in the daily sacrifice, one in the morning, and one in the evening. But what other daily offering can there be, that can be meant to be offered by a reasonable nature, except the perfect Word, typically called the Lamb? This VER. 29 - 31. ST. JOHN. 57 sacrifice, which is offered up as soon as the soul begins to be enlightened, shall be accounted as a morning sacrifice, referring to the frequent exercise of the mind in divine things; for the soul cannot continually apply to the highest objects because of its union with an earthly and gross body. By this Word too, Which is Christ the Lamb, we shall be able to reason on many things, and shall in a manner attain to Him in the evening, while engaged with things of the body'. But He Who offered the lamb for a sacrifice, was God hid in human form, the great Priest, He who saith below, man laketh it (My life) from Me, but I lay it down of18' Myself: whence this name, the Lamb of God: for He carrying our sorrows, and taking away the sins of the whole Isaiah world, hath undergone death, as it were baptism. For Godjpe4t*2> suffers no fault to pass uncorrected; but punishes it by the24- sharpest discipline. THEOPHYL. He is called the Lamb of 50*. e God, because God the Father accepted His death for our salva- in loc- tion, or, in other words, because He delivered Him up to death for our sakes. For just as we say, This is the offering of such a man, meaning the offering made by him; in the same sense Christ is called the Lamb of God Who gave His Son to die for our salvation. And whereas that typical lamb did not take away any man's sin, this one hath taken away the sin of the whole world, rescuing it from the danger it was in from the wrath of God. Behold Him1 Who taketh away Me* Vul£- tiCce re- sin of the world: he saith not, who will take, but, taketh away the sin of the world; as if He were always doing this. For He did not then only take it away when He suffered, but from that time to the present, He taketh it away; not by being always crucified, for He made one sacrifice for sins, but by ever washing it by means of that sacrifice. GREG. But then only will sin be entirely taken 1 Christ the Word is our real daily ritual thoughts, and this is still con-vllK c* sacrifice. He carries on within us what tinued in the Christian, even although32' is outwardly typified by the Mosaic by reason of the infirmity of the flesh, ritual. As in the Jewish temple the he cannot always abide in meditation on day began with the one continual sacri- the Divinest things, yet is, in Christ, fice which was carried on by others in engaged on many useful things, and so their turn through the day, (vid.Orig. vi. also when He comes even to the things c. 34.) till at last the evening sacrifice of the body, in themselves a sort of put a close to all sacred services: so in evening and night to the soul, still our mind? a sacrifice is offered up to God doing them also in Christ, he closes all when the Word (from Whom our word, in Christ. i. e. reason, is derived) lights up spi- 58 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. 1. u way from the human race, when our corruption has been turned to a glorious incorruption. We cannot be free from sin, so long as we are held in the death of the body. THEO- Theoph. PHYL. Why does he say the sin of the world, not sins ? oe* Because he wished to express sin universally: just as we say commonly, that man was cast out of paradise; meaning the whole human race. GLOSS; Or by the sin of the world is meant original sin, which is common to the whole world: which original sin, as well as the sins of every one individually, Aus- Christ by His grace remits. AUG. For He Who took not sin 10, li. from our nature, He it is Who taketh away our sin. Some say, We take away the sins of men, because we are holy; for if he, who baptizes, is not holy, how can he take away the other's sin, seeing he himself is full of sin? Against these reasoners let us point to the text; Behold Him Who taketh away the sin of the world; in order to do away with such Orig. presumption in man towards man. ORIGEN; As there was c?36.T1' a connexion between the other sacrifices of the law, and the daily sacrifice of the lamb, in the same way the sacrifice of this Lamb has its reflexion in the pouring out of the blood of the Martyrs, by whose patience, confession, and zeal for goodness, the machinations of the ungodly are frustrated. Theoph. THEOPIIYL. John having said above to those who came from the Pharisees, that there stood one among them whom they knew not, he here points Him out to the persons thus ignorant: This is He of whom I said, After me cometh a man which is preferred before me. Our Lord is called a man, in reference to His mature age, being thirty years old when He was baptized: or in a spiritual sense, as the Spouse of 2 Cor. the Church; in which sense St. Paul speaks, I hare espoused you to one husband., that I may present you as a chaste Aug. virgin to Christ. AUG. He comet Jt after me, because he was born after me: He is made before me, because He is preferred Greg, to me. GREG. He explains the reason of this superiority, in vii°7n vvna^ follows: For He was before me; as if his meaning was; Ev.c. 3. And this is the reason of His being superior to me, though born after me, viz. that He is not circumscribed by the time of His nativity. He Who was born of His mother in time, Theoph. was begotten of His Father out of time. THEOPHYL. Attend, 1)1 loc' O Arius. He saith not, He was created before me, but He VER. 29—31. ST. JOHN. 59 was before me. Let the false sect of Paul of Samosata attend. They will see that He did not derive His original existence from Mary; for if He derived the beginning of His being from the Virgin, how could He have been before His precursor? it being evident that the precursor preceded Christ by six months, according to the human birth. CHHYS. Chrys. That He might not seem however to give His testimony from xv^a| any motive of friendship or kindred, in consequence of his being xvi.) 2. related to our Lord according to the flesh, he says, / knew Him not. John could not of course know Him, having lived in the desert. And the miraculous events of Christ's child hood, the journey of the Magi, and such like, were now along time past; John having been quite an infant, when they happened. And throughout the whole of the interval, He had been absolutely unknown: insomuch that John proceeds, But that He should be made manifest to Israel, therefore am I come baptizing with water. (And hence it is clear that the miracles said to have been performed by Christ in His childhood, are false and fictitious. For if Jesus had performed miracles at this early age, he would not have been unknown to John, nor would the multitude have wanted a teacher to point Him out ) Christ Himself then did not want baptism; nor was that washing for any other reason, than to give a sign beforehand of faith in Christ. For John saith not, in order to change men, and deliver from sin, but, that he should be made manifest in Israel, have I come baptizing. But would it not have been lawful for him to preach, and bring crowds together, without baptizing? Yes: but this was the easier way, for he would not have collected such numbers, had he preached without baptizing. AUG. Aug. Now when our Lord became known, it was unnecessary to 0*{g*{ prepare a way for Him; for to those who knew Him, He became His own way. And therefore John's baptism did not last long, but only so long as to shew our Lord's humility. Our Lord received baptism from a servant, inTr. v. order to give us such a lesson of humility as might prepare c' * us for receiving the grace of baptism, And that the servant's baptism might not be set before the Lord's, others were baptized with it; who after receiving it, had to receive our Lord's baptism : whereas those who first received our Lord's baptism, did not receive the servant's after. 60 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. 32. And John bare record, saying, I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode upon him. 33. And I knew him not: but he that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and re maining on him, the same is he which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. 34. And I saw, and bare record that this is the Son of God. Chrys. CmiYS. John having made a declaration, so astonishing xvii.(al. to all his hearers, viz. that He, whom he pointed out, did of xvi.)2. Himself take away the sins of the world, confirms it by a reference to the Father and the Holy Spirit. For John might be asked, how did you know Him? Wherefore he replies beforehand, by the descent of the Holy Spirit: And John bare record, saying, I saw the Spirit descending from Aug. de heaven like a dove, and it abode upon him. AUG. This was c. 46*. 'not however the first occasion of Christ's receiving the (6>) unction of the Holy Spirit: viz. Tts descent upon Him at His baptism; wherein He condescended to prefigure His body, the Church, wherein those who are baptized receive preeminently the Holy Spirit. For it would be absurd to suppose that at thirty years old, (which was His age, when He was baptized by John,) He received for the first time the Holy Spirit: and that, when He came to that baptism, as He was without sin, so was He without the Holy Spirit. For if even of His servant and forerunner John it is written, He shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from His mother's womb; if He, though sprung from His father's seed, yet received the Holy Ghost, when as yet He was only formed in the womb; what ought we to think and believe of Christ, whose very flesh had not a carnal but spiritual conception ? AuS- AUG. We do not attribute to Christ only the possession of Chris- a real body, and say that the Holy Spirit assumed a false 24^22°) appearance to men's eyes: for the Holy Spirit could no more, in consistency with His nature, deceive men, than could the Son of God. The Almighty God, Who made every creature out of nothing, could as easily form a real body of VER, 32 — 34. ST. JOHN. 61 a dove, without the instrumentality of other doves, as He made a real body in the womb of the Virgin, without the seed of the male. AUG. The Holy Ghost was made to Aug. appear visibly in two ways : as a dove, upon our Lord at His xr. ??"' baptism ; and as a flame upon His disciples, when they were sParsim met together: the former shape denoting simplicity, the latter fervency. The dove intimates that souls sanctified by the Spirit should have no guile; the fire, that in that simplicity there should not be coldness. Nor let it disturb thee, that the tongues are cloven; fear no division; unity is assured to us in the dove. It was meet then that the Holy Spirit should be thus manifested descending upon our Lord; in order that every one who had the Spirit might know, that he ought to be simple as a dove, and be in sincere peace with the brethren. The kisses of doves represent this peace. Ravens kiss, but they tear also; but the nature of the dove is most alien to tearing. Ravens feed on the dead, but the dove eats nothing but the fruits of the earth. If doves moan in their love, marvel not that He Who appeared in the likeness of a dove, the Holy Spirit, maketh intercession for^om. 8, us with groanings that cannot be uttered. The Holy Spirit however groaneth not in Himself, but in us: He maketh us to groan. And he who groaneth, as knowing that, so long as He is under the burden of this mortality, he is absent from the Lord, groaneth well: it is the Spirit that hath taught him to groan. But many groan because of earthly calamities; because of losses which disquiet them, or bodily sickness which weigh heavily on them: they groan not, as doth the dove. What then could more fitly represent the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of unity, than the dove? as He saith Himself to His reconciled Church, My dove is one. What Cant' 6, could better express humility, than the simplicity and moaning of a dove? Wherefore on this occasion it was that there appeared the very most Holy Trinity, the Father in the voice which said, Thou art My beloved Son; the Holy Spirit in the likeness of the dove. In that Trinity the Matt. Apostles were sent to baptize, i. e. in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. GREG. He saith, Abode upon Him: for the Holy Spirit visits all the faithful ; ijv> (90. but on the Mediator alone does He abide for ever in a <)*2 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. peculiar manner; never leaving the Son's Humanity, even as He proceeds Himself from the Son's Divinity. But when Jotm H, the disciples are told of the same Spirit, He shall dwell with you, how is the abiding of the Spirit a peculiar sign of Christ? This will appear if we distinguish between the different gifts of the Spirit. As regards those gifts which are necessary for attaining to life, the Holy Spirit ever abides in all the elect; such are gentleness, humility, faith, hope, charity : but with respect to those, which have for their object, not our own salvation, but that of others, he does not always abide, but sometimes withdraws, and ceases to exhibit them; that men may be more humble in the possession of His gifts. But Christ had all the gifts of the Spirit, un- Chrys. interruptedly always. CHRYS. Should any however think that xVTi^'al Christ really wanted the Holy Spirit, in the way that we do, xvi.) 2. he corrects this notion also, by informing us that the descent 'of the Holy Ghost took place only for the purpose of mani festing Christ : And I knew Him not : but He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me. Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remaining on Him, the Aug. same is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. AUG. But who sent John? If we say the Father, we say true; if we say the Son, we say true. But it would be truer to say, the Father and the Son. How then knew he not Him, by Whom he was sent? For if he knew not Him, by Whom he wished to be baptized, it was rash in him to say, / have need to be baptized by Thee. So then he knew Him ; and why Chrys. saith he, I knew Him not? CHRYS. When he saith, / knew ^?™- Him not, he is speaking of time past, not of the time of his xvi.)c.s. baptism, when he forbad Him, saying, I have need to be bap- Aug?an' tize& °f Thee. AUG. Let us turn to the other Evangelists, who Tr. iv.v. relate the matter more clearly, and we shall find most satis- sparsim. factorily, that the dove descended when our Lord ascended from the water. If then the dove descended after baptism, but John said before the baptism, / have need to be baptized of Thee, he knew Him before His baptism also. How then said he. / knew him not, but He which sent me to baptize? Was this the first revelation made to John of Christ's person, or was it not rather a fuller disclosure of what had been already revealed? John knew the Lord to be the Son Tr. c. i. VER. 3-2—34. ST. JOHN. 63 of God, knew that He would baptize with the Holy Ghost: for before Christ came to the river, many having come together to hear John, he said unto them, He that cometh Matt. 3, after me is mightier than I: He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire. What then ? He did not know that our Lord (lest Paul or Peter might say, my baptism, as we find Paul did say, my Gospel,) would have and retain to Himself the power of baptism, the ministering of it however passing to good and bad indiscriminately. What hindrance is the badness of the minister, when the Lord is good? So then we baptize again after John's baptism ; after a homicide's we baptize not: because John gave his own baptism, the homicide gives Christ's; which is so holy a sacrament, that not even a homicide's ministration can pollute it. Our Lord could, had He so willed, have given power to any servant of His to give baptism as it were in His own stead; and to the baptism, thus transferred to the servant, have imparted the same power, that it would have had, when given by Himself. But this He did not choose to do; that the hope of the baptized might be directed to Him, Who had baptized them; He wished not the servant to place hope in the servant. And again, had He given this power to servants, there would have been as many baptisms as servants ; as there had been the baptism of John, so should we have had the baptism of Paul and of Peter. It is by this power then, which Christ retains in His own possession exclusively, that the unity of the Church is established ; of which it is said, My dove is one. Cant. 6, A man may have a baptism besides the dove; but that any9- besides the dove should profit, is impossible. CHRYS. The Chry*. Father having sent forth a voice proclaiming the Son, the Holy ^^(al. Spirit came besides, bringing the voice upon the head of Christ, xvi-) 3- in order that no one present might think that what was said of Christ, was said of John. But it will be asked: How was it that the Jews believed not, if they saw the Spirit ? Such sights however require the mental vision, rather than the bodily. If those who saw Christ working miracles were so drunken with malice, that they denied what their own eyes had seen, how could the appearance of the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove overcome their incredulity ? Some say however that the sight was not visible to all, but only to John, and the more 64 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. devotional part. But even if the descent of the Spirit, as a dove, was visible to the outward eye, it does not follow that because all saw it, all understood it. Zacharias himself, Daniel, Ezechiel, and Moses saw many things, appearing to their senses, which no one else saw: and therefore John adds, And I saw and bare record tliat this is the Son of God. He had called Him the Lamb before, and said that He would baptize with the Spirit; but he had no where Aug. called Him the Son before. AUG. It was necessary that the in Joan. Only Son of God should baptize, not an adopted son. Adopted sons are ministers of the Only Son: but though they have the ministration, the Only one alone has the power. 35. Again the next day after John stood, and two of his disciples; 36. And looking upon Jesus as he walked, he saith, Behold the Lamb of God! Chrys. CHRYS. Many not having attended to John's words at al first> ne rouses them a second time: Again the next day i. after John stood, and two of his disciples. BEDE; John Horn in'9^0^' because he had ascended that citadel of all excel- Vigil. lences, from which no temptations could cast him down : his S. And. Disciples stood with him, as stout-hearted followers of their Chrys. master. CHKYS. But wherefore went he not all about, t preaching in every place of Judaea; instead of standing near xvii.) c. the river, waiting for His coming, that he might point Him out? Because he wished this to be done by the works of Christ Himself. And observe how much greater an effort was produced ; He struck a small spark, and suddenly it rose into a flame. Again, if John had gone about and preached, it would have seemed like human partiality, and great suspicion would have been excited. Now the Prophets and Apostles all preached Christ absent; the former before His appearance in the flesh, the latter after His assumption. But He was to be pointed out by the eye, not by the voice only; and therefore it follows: And looking upon Jesus as He walked, he saith, Behold Ihe Lamb of God! THEOPHYL. Looking VER. 87 — 40. ST. JOHN. 65 he saith, as if signifying by his looks his love and admiration for Christ. AUG. John was the friend of the Bridegroom; Aug. he sought not his own glory, but bare witness to the truth. JrgVI1' And therefore he wished not his disciples to remain with him, to the hindrance of their duty to follow the Lord; but rather shewed them whom they should follow, saying, Behold the Lamb of God. CHRYS. He makes not a long discourse, Chrys. having only one object before him, to bring them and join^™'^ them to Christ; knowing that they would not any further in Joan- need his witness. John does not however speak to his c. 2. disciples alone, but publicly in the presence of all. And so, undertaking to follow Christ, through this instruction common to all, they remained thenceforth firm, following Christ for then- own advantage, not as an act of favour to their master x. John does not exhort: he simply gazes in admiration on Christ, pointing out the gift y He came to bestow, the cleansing from sin: and the mode in which this would be accomplished: both of which the word Lamb testifies to. Lamb has the article affixed to it, as a sign of preeminence. AUG. For He alone and singly Aug. is the Lamb without spot, without sin; not because Hiscr5V" spots are wiped offj but because He never had a spot. He alone is the Lamb of God, for by His blood alone can men be redeemed. This is the Lamb whom the wolves fear;c. G. even the slain Lamb, by whom the lion was slain. BEDE. Bede. The Lamb therefore he calls Him ; for that He was about to give us freely His fleece, that we might make of it a wedding garment; i. e. would leave us an example of life, by which we should be warmed into love. ALCUIN. John stands in a mystical sense, the Law having ceased, and Jesus comes, bringing the grace of the Gospel, to which that same Law bears testimony. Jesus walks, to collect disciples. BEDE. Bede. The walking of Jesus has a reference to the economy of they™?]'11 Incarnation, by means of which He has condescended to S. And. come to us, and give us a pattern of life. 37. And the two disciples heard him speak, and they followed Jesus. Xov, i. e. John. In the v^ftov reu xudu^au. The Cat. has " pra> Cat. is substituted " propter gratiam parationem propter quam venit et mo- Christi." dum preparationis." Perhaps it should >" TIJV 5 truviyrinra nod rev be " purgationis." 66 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. 38. Then Jesus turned, and saw them following, and saith unto them, What seek ye ? They said unto Him, Rahhi, (which is to say, heing interpreted, Master,) where dwellest thou ? 39. He saith unto them, Come and see. They came and saw where he dwelt, and abode with him that day: for it was about the tenth hour. 40. One of the two which heard John speak, and followed him, was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother. ALCUIN. John having borne witness that Jesus was the Lamb of God, the disciples who had been hitherto with him, in obedience to his command, followed Jesus : And the two Chrys. disciples heard him speak, and they followed Jesus. CHRYS. ^J™' Observe ; when he said, He that cometh after me is made i et sq. before me, and, Whose shoe's latchet I am not worthy to unloose, he gained over none ; but when he made mention of the economy, and gave his discourse a humbler turn, saying, Behold the Lamb of God, then his disciples followed Christ. For many persons are less influenced by the thoughts of God's greatness and majesty, than when they hear of His being man's Helper and Friend; or any thing pertaining to the salvation of men. Observe too, when John says, Behold the Lamb of God, Christ says nothing. The Bridegroom stands by in silence ; others introduce Him, and deliver the Bride into His hands; He receives her, and so treats her that she no longer remembers those who gave her in marriage. Thus Christ came to unite to Himself the Church ; He said nothing Himself; but John, the friend of the Bridegroom, came forth, and put the Bride's right hand in His ; i. e. by his preaching delivered into His hands men's souls, whom receiving He so disposed of, that they returned no more to John. And observe farther; As at a marriage the maiden goes not to meet the bridegroom, (even though it be a king's son who weds a humble handmaid,) but he hastens to her ; so is it here. For human nature ascended not into heaven, but the Son of God came down to human nature, and took her to His Father's house. Again ; There were disciples of John who not only did not follow Christ, but were even VER. 37 — 40. ST. JOHN. 67 enviously disposed toward Him ; but the better part heard, and followed ; not from contempt of their former master, but by his persuasion ; because he promised them that Christ would baptize with the Holy Ghost. And see with what modesty their zeal was accompanied. They did not straight way go and interrogate Jesus on great and necessary doc trines, nor in public, but sought private converse with Him; for we are told that Jesus turned, and saw lliem following, and saith unto them, What seek ye ? Hence we learn, that when we once begin to form good resolutions, God gives us opportunities enough of improvement. Christ asks the question, not because He needed to be told, but in order to encourage familiarity and confidence, and shew that He thought them worthy of His instructions. THEOPHYL. Ob-inloc. serve then, that it was upon those who followed Him, that our Lord turned His face and looked upon them. Unless thou by thy good works follow Him, thou shalt never be permitted to see His face, or enter into His dwelling. ALCUIN. The disciples followed behind His back, in order to see Him, and did not see His face. So He turns round, and, as it were, lowers His majesty, that they might be enabled to behold His face. ORIGEN. Perhaps it is not without aOrig. reason, that after six testimonies John ceases to bear witness, o.1^"' and Jesus asks seventhly, What seek ye? CHRYS. Andchrys. besides following Him, their questions shewed their love forxv°™' Christ; T key said unto Him, Rabbi, (which is, being inter- ^ Joan. preted, Master,) where dwellest Thou ? They call Him, sp Master, before they have learnt any thing from Him ; thus encouraging themselves in their resolution to become dis ciples, and to shew the reason why they followed. ORIGEN. An avowal, befitting persons who came from hearing John's testimony. They put themselves under Christ's teaching, and express their desire to see the dwelling of the Son of God. ALCUIN. They do not wish to be under His teaching for a time only, but enquire where He abides ; wishing an immediate initiation in the secrets of His word, and after wards meaning often to visit Him, and obtain fuller instruc tion. And, in a mystical sense too, they wish to know in whom Christ dwells, that profiting by their example they may themselves become fit to be His dwelling. Or, their F 2 *>o GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. T. seeing Jesus walking, and straightway enquiring whore He resides, is an intimation to us, that we should, remembering His Incarnation, earnestly entreat Him to shew us our eternal habitation. The request being so good a one, Christ promises a free and full disclosure. He saith unto them, Come and see: that is to say, My dwelling is not to be under stood by words, but by works ; come, therefore, by believing Orig. and working, and then see by understanding. ORIGEN. Or C0129H' perhaps come, is an invitation to action; see, to contempla- Chrys. tion. CHRYS. Christ does not describe His house and xviii. situation, but brings them after Him, shewing that he had (al.xvu.) already accepted them as His own. He says not, It is not the time now, to-morrow ye shall hear if ye wish to learn ; but addresses them familiarly, as friends who had lived with him a long time. But how is it that He saith in another Matt. 8, place, The Son of man hath not where to lay His head ? when here He says, Come and see where I live ? His not having where to lay His head, could only have meant that He had no dwelling of His own, not that He did not live in a house at all : for the next words are, They came and saw where He divelt, and abode with Him that day. Why they stayed the Evangelist does not say : it being obviously for the A«g- sake of His teaching. AUG. What a blessed day and night c. 9. was that ! Let us too build up in our hearts within, and make Him an house, whither He may come and teach us. THEOPHYL. Audit ivas about the tenth hour. The Evan gelist mentions the time of day purposely, as a hint both to teachers and learners, not to let time interfere with their Chrys. w7ork. CHRYS. It shewed a strong desire to hear Him, xviii. 3. since even at sunset they did not turn from Him. To sensual persons the time after meals is unsuitable for any grave employment, their bodies being overloaded with food. But John, whose disciples these were, was not such an one. His evening was a more abstemious one than our mornings. Aug. AUG. The number here signifies the law, which was composed (/io" °ften commandments. The time had come W7hen the law was to be fulfilled by love, the Jews, who acted from fear, having been unable to fulfil it, and therefore was it at the tenth hour that our Lord heard Himself called, Rabbi; 'magis-none but the giver of the law is the teacher1 of the law. ter VER. 41, 42. ST. JOHN. 69 CHRYS. One of the two which heard John speak and followed 'Chrys. Horn, xviii. 3. Him was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother. Why is the other Hom' name left out ? Some say, because this Evangelist himself was that other. Others, that it was a disciple of no eminence, and that there was no use in telling his name any more than those of the seventy-two, which are omitted. ALCUIN. Or it would seem that the two disciples who followed Jesus were Andrew and Philip. 41. He first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the Christ. 42. And he brought him to Jesus. And when Jesus beheld him, he said, Thou art Simon the son of Jona : thou shalt be called Cephas, which is by interpretation, A stone. CHRYS. Andrew kept not our Lord's words to himself; but chrys. ran in haste to his brother, to report the good tidings : -HkJ^J first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the Christ. BEDE. This is truly to find the Lord; viz. to haveBedo. fervent love for Him, together with a care for our brother's y^g salvation. CHRYS. The Evangelist does not mention what Andr. Christ said to those who followed Him ; but we may infer it Hom!' from what follows. Andrew declares in few words what he *ix._(al had learnt, discloses the power of that Master Who had persuaded them, and his own previous longings after Him. For this exclamation, We have found, expresses a longing for His coining, turned to exultation, now that He was really come. AUG. Messias in Hebrew, Christus in Greek, Unctus Aug. in Latin. Chrism is unction, and He had a special unction, J1^11' which from Him extended to all Christians, as appears in the Psalm, God, even Thy God, hath anointed Thee with the oil ofp*. 44, gladness above Thy fellows1. All holy persons are partakers £4^ with Him ; but He is specially the Holy of Holies, specially pib anointed. CHRYS. And therefore he said not Messias, but Chrs. the Messias. Mark the obedience of Peter from the very first; ho went immediately without delay, as appears 70 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. from the next words: And he brought him to Jesus. Nor let us blame him as too yielding, because he did not ask many questions, before he received the word. It is reasonable to suppose that his brother had told him all, and sufficiently fully; but the Evangelists often make omissions for the sake of brevity. But, besides this, it is not absolutely said that he did believe, but only, He took him to Jesus ; i. e. to learn from the mouth of Jesus Himself, what Andrew had reported. Our Lord begins now Himself to reveal the things of His Divinity, and to exhibit them gradually by prophecy. For prophecies are no less persuasive than miracles ; inas much as they are preeminently God's work, and are beyond the power of devils to imitate, while miracles may be phantasy or appearance : the foretelling future events with certainty is an attribute of the incorruptible nature alone: And when Jesus beheld him, He said, Thou art Simon the son of Jonas; thou shalt be called Cephas, which Bede. js ty interpretation, A stone. BEDE. He beheld him not Temp. ' with His natural eye only, but by the insight of His Godhead discerned from eternity the simplicity and greatness of his Andr. soul, for which he was to be elevated above the whole Church. In the word Peter, we must not look for any additional meaning, as though it were of Hebrew or Syriac derivation ; for the Greek and Latin word Peter, has the same meaning as Cephas ; being in both languages derived from petra. He is called Peter on account of the firmness of his faith, in cleaving to that Rock, of which the Apostle i Cor. speaks, And that Eock was Christ; which secures those who trust in it from the snares of the enemy, and dispenses Aug. streams of spiritual gifts. AUG. There was nothing very c. 14. ' great in our Lord saying whose son he was, for our Lord knew the names of all His saints, having predestinated them before the foundation of the world. But it was a great thing for our Lord to change his name from Simon to Peter. Peter is from petra, rock, which rock is the Church : so that the name of Peter represents the Church. And who is safe, unless he build upon a rock ? Our Lord here rouses our attention : for had he been called Peter before, we should not have seen the mystery of the Rock, and should have thought that he was called so by chance, and not pro- VEB. 43—46. ST. JOHN. 71 videntially. God therefore made him to be called by another name before, that the change of that name might give vivid ness to the mystery. CHRYS. He changed the name too to Chrys. shew that He was the same who done so before in the Old xix- ^ Testament; who had called Abram Abraham, Sarai Sarah, xviii.2.) Jacob Israel. Many He had named from their birth, as Isaac and Samson ; others again after being named by their parents, as were Peter, and the sons of Zebedee. Those whose virtue was to be eminent from the first, have names given them from the first; those who were to be exalted afterwards, are named afterwards. AUG. The account Aug. here of the two disciples on the Jordan, who follow Christ E (before he had gone into Galilee) in obedience to John's1-11-0- testimony ; viz. of Andrew bringing his brother Simon to Jesus, who gave him, on this occasion, the name of Peter; disagrees considerably with the account of the other Evan gelists, viz. that our Lord found these two, Simon and Andrew, fishing in Galilee, and then bid them follow Him : unless we understand that they did not regularly join our Lord when they saw Him on the Jordan ; but only discovered who He was, and full of wonder, then returned to their occu pations. Nor must we think that Peter first received his name on the occasion mentioned in Matthew, when our Lord says, Thou art Peter, and upon this rock will 1 build My Mat. 1 6, Church ; but rather when our Lord says, Thou shall be called Cephas, which is by interpretation, A stone. ALCUIN. Or per haps He does not actually give him the name now, but only fixes beforehand what He afterwards gave him when He said, Thou art Peter, and upon this rock will I build My Church. And while about to change his name, Christ wishes to shew that even that which his parents had given him, was not without a meaning. For Simon signifies obedience, Joanna grace, Jona a dove : as if the meaning was ; Thou art an obedient son of grace, or of the dove, i. e. the Holy Spirit ; for thou hast received of the Holy Spirit the humility, to desire, at Andrew's call, to see Me. The elder disdained not to follow the younger ; for where there is meritorious faith, there is no order of seniority. 43. The day following Jesus would go forth into 72 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. Galilee, and findeth Philip, and saith unto him, Follow me. 44. Now Philip was of Bethsaida, the city of Andrew and Peter. 45. Philip findeth Nathanael, and saith unto him, We have found him, of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. 46. And Nathanael said unto him, Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth ? Philip saith unto him, Come and see. Chrys. CfliiYS. After gaining these disciples, Christ proceeded to I*om- convert others, viz. Philip and Nathanael : The day follow ing, Jesus would go forth into Galilee. ALCUIN. Leaving, that is, Judaea, where John was baptizing, out of respect to the Baptist, and not to appear to lower his office, so long as it continued. He was going too to call a disciple, and wished to go forth into Galilee, i. e. to a place of " transition" or "revelation," that is to say, that as He Himself increased in wisdom or stature, and in favour with God and man, and as He suffered and rose again, and entered into His glory : so He would teach His followers to go forth, and increase in virtue, and pass through suffering to joy. He findeth Philip, and saith unto him, Follow Ale. Every one follows Jesus who imitates His humility and suffering, in order to be Chrys. partaker of His resurrection and ascension. CHRYS. Observe, Horn. j_je ^ not cau t]]em? before some had of their own accord joined Him : for had He invited them, before any had joined Him, perhaps they would have started back : but now having determined to follow of their own free choice, they remain firm ever after. He calls Philip, however, because he would be known to him, from living in Galilee. But what made Philip follow Christ ? Andrew heard from John the Baptist, and Peter from Andrew ; he had heard from no one ; and yet 011 Christ saying, Follow Me, was persuaded instantly. It is not improbable that Philip may have heard John : and yet it may have been the mere voice of Christ which pro duced this effect, THEOPHYL. For the voice of Christ VEB. 43 — 46. ST. JOHN. 73 sounded not like a common voice to some, that is, the faith ful, but kindled in their inmost soul the love of Him. Philip having been continually meditating on Christ, and reading the books of Moses, so confidently expected Him, that the instant he saw, he believed. Perhaps too he had heard of Him from Andrew and Peter, coming from the same district; an explanation which the Evangelist seems to hint at, when he adds, Now Philip was of Bethsaida, the city of Andrew and Peter. CHRYS. The power of Christ appears Chrys. by His gathering fruit out of a barren country. For from xxonj' that Galilee, out of which there ariseth no prophet, He takes His most distinguished disciples. ALCUIN. Bethsaida means house of hunters. The Evangelist introduces the name of this place by way of allusion to the characters of Philip, Peter, and Andrew, and their future office, i. e. catching and saving souls. CHRYS. Philip is not persuaded himself, but Chrys. begins preaching to others: Philip findeth Nathanael, and^°mj saith unto him. We have found Him of whom Moses in the Law, and the Prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of Joseph. See how zealous he is, and how constantly he is meditating on the books of Moses, and looking for Christ's coming. That Christ was coming he had known before; but he did not know that this was the Christ, of whom Moses and I lie Prophets did write : He says this to give cre dibility to his preaching, and to shew his zeal for the Law and the Prophets, and how that he had examined them attentively. Be not disturbed at his calling our Lord the Son of Joseph ; this was what He was supposed to be. AUG. The person to Aug. whom our Lord's mother had been betrothed, The Christians c< jj know from the Gospel, that He was conceived and born of an undefiled mother. He adds the place too, of Nazareth. THKOPIIYL. He was bred up there : the place of His birth could not have been known generally, but all knew that He was bred up in Nazareth. And Nathanacl said unto him, Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth. AUG. However you may understand Aug. these words, Philip's answer will suit. You may read it jl"' either as affirmatory, Something good can come out ofiQ, 17. Nazareth; to which the other says, Come and see: or you may read it as a question, implying doubt on Nathauael's 74 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. part, Can any good thing come out of Nazareth ? Come and see. Since either way of reading agrees equally with what follows, we must inquire the meaning of the passage. Nathanael was well read in the Law, and therefore the word Nazareth (Philip having said that he had found Jesus of Nazareth) immediately raises his hopes, and he exclaims, Something good can come out of Nazareth. Pie had searched the Scriptures, and knew, what the Scribes and Pharisees could not, that the Saviour was to be expected thence. ALCUIN. He who alone is absolutely holy, harmless, unde- isaiab filed ; of whom the prophet saith, There shall come forth n' 1- a rod out of the stem of Jesse ', and a branch (Nazaraeus) shall grow out of his roots. Or the words may be taken as ex- Chr -s pressing doubt, and asking the question. CHRYS. Nathanael Horn, knew from the Scriptures, that Christ was to come from xx 1 2 Micah Bethlehem, according to the prophecy of Micah, And thou, 5? 2- Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, — out of thee shall come a Governor^ that shall rule my people Israel. On hearing of Nazareth, then, he doubted, and was not able to reconcile Philip's tidings with prophecy. For the Prophets call Him a Nazarene, only in reference to His education and mode of life. Observe, however, the discretion and gentleness with which he communicates his doubts. He does not say, Thou deceivest me, Philip ; but simply asks the question, Can any good thing come out of Nazareth ? Philip too in turn is equally discrete. He is not confounded by the question, but dwells upon it, and lingers in the hope of bringing him to Christ: Philip saith unto him. Come and see. He takes him to Christ, knowing that when he had once tasted of His words and doctrine, he will make no more resistance. 47. Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile ! 48. Nathanael saith unto him, Whence knowest thou me ? Jesus answered and said unto him, Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee. VER. 47 — <51. ST. JOHN. 75 49. Nathanael answered and saith unto him, Rabbi, thou art the Son of God ; thou art the King of Israel. 50. Jesus answered and said unto him, Because I said unto thee, I saw thee under the fig tree, believest thou ? thou shalt see greater things than these. 51. And he saith unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man. CHRYS. Nathanael, in difficulty as to Christ coming out Chrys. of Nazareth, shewed the care with which he had read the ^°m< Scriptures : his not rejecting the tidings when brought him, shewed his strong desire for Christ's coming. He thought that Philip might be mistaken as to the place. It follows, Jesus saw Nathanael coming to Him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile! There was no fault to be found with him, though he had spoken like one who did not believe, because he was more deeply read in the Prophets than Philip. He calls him guileless, because he had said nothing to gain favour, or gratify malice. AUG. What meaneth this, In whom is no guile? Had he no Aug. sin ? Was no physician necessary for him ? Far from it. No 0/J ™ one was ever born, of a temper not to need the Physician. It is guile, when we say one thing, and think another. How then was there no guile in him ? Because, if he was a sinner, he confessed his sin ; whereas if a man, being a sinner, pretends to be righteous, there is guile in his mouth. Our Lord then commended the confession of sin in Nathanael ; He did not pronounce him not a sinner. THEOPHYL. Na- Ihanael however, notwithstanding this praise, does not acquiesce immediately, but waits for further evidence, and asks, Whence knowest Thou me ? CHRYS. He asks as man, chrys. Jesus answers as God : Jesus answered and said unto him, Horn. Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the jig tree, I saw thee : not having beheld him as man, but as God discerning him from above. / saw thee, He says, that is, the character of thy life, when thou wast under the fig tree: where the two, Philip and Nathanael, had been talking to- 76 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. I. gether alone, nobody seeing them ; and on this account it is said, that on seeing him a long way off, He said. Behold an Israelite indeed ; whence it appears that this speech was before Philip came near, so that no suspicion could attach to Christ's testimony. Christ would not say, I am not of Nazareth, as Philip told you, but of Bethlehem; in order to ApQiff- avoid an argument: and because it would not have been Jml7- sufficient proof, had He mentioned it, of His being the y°v- Christ. He preferred rather proving this by His having Aug. been present at their conversation. AUG. Has this fig tree c. 21. ' any meaning? We read of one fig tree which was cursed, because it had only leaves, and no fruit. Again, at the creation, Adam and Eve, after sinning, made themselves aprons of fig leaves. Fig leaves then signify sins ; and Nathanael, when he was under the fig tree, was under the shadow of death : so that our Lord seemeth to say, O Israel, whoever of you is without guile, O people of the Jewish faith, before that I called thee by My Apostles, when thou wort as yet under the shadow of death, and sawest Me not, I Greg, saw thee. GREG. When thou wast under the fig tree, I saw kor.'c. thee; i. e. when thou wast yet under the shade of the law, I xxxvni. chosc thee. AUG. Nathanael remembered that he had been Aug. under the fig tree, where Christ was not present corporeally, 40rm" but only by His spiritual knowledge. Hence, knowing that he (122.) had been alone, he recognised our Lord's Divinity. CHRYS. Chrys. That our Lord then had this knowledge, had penetrated xx. * into his mind, had not blamed but praised his hesitation, proved to Nathanael that He was the true Christ : Nathanael answered and saith unto Him, Rabbi, Thou art the Son of God, Thou art the King of Israel : as if he said, Thou art He who was expected, thou art He who was sought for. Sure proof being obtained, he proceeds to make confession ; herein shewing his devotion, as his former hesitation had Horn, shewn his diligence. ID. Many when they read this passage, xx!> l.'are perplexed at finding that, whereas Peter was pronounced blessed for having, after our Lord's miracles and teaching, confessed Him to be the Son of God, Nathanael, who makes the same confession before, has no such benediction. The reason is this. Peter and Nathanael both used the same words, but not in the same meaning. Peter confessed our VER. 47 — 51. ST. JOHN. 77 Lord to be the Son of God, in the sense of very God ; the latter in the sense of mere man; for after saying, Thou art the Son of God, he adds, Thou art the King of Israel; whereas the Son of God was not the King of Israel only, but of the whole world. This is manifest from what follows. For in the case of Peter Christ added nothing, but, as if his faith were perfect, said, that he would build the Church upon his confession ; whereas Nathanael, as if his confession were very deficient, is led up to higher things : Jesus answered and said unto him. Because I said unto thee, I saw thee under the fig tree, believest thou ? Thou shalt see greater things than these. As if He said, What I have just said has appeared a great matter to thee, and thou hast confessed Me to be King of Israel ; what wilt thou say when thou seest greater things than these ? What that greater thing is He proceeds to shew : And He saith unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man. See how He raises him from earth for a while, and forces him to think that Christ is not a mere man : for how could He be a mere man, whom angels ministered to ? It was, as it were, saying, that He was Lord of .the Angels; for He must be the King's own Son, on whom the servants of the King descended and ascended ; descended at His crucifixion, ascended at His resurrection and ascension. Angels too before this came and ministered unto Him, and angels brought the glad tidings of His birth. Our Lord made the present a proof of the future. After the powers He had already shewn, Nathanael would readily believe that much more would follow. AUG. Let us recollect the Old Aug. in Testament account. Jacob saw in a dream a ladder p0m. reaching from earth to heaven ; the Lord resting upon it, and the angels ascending and descending upon it. Lastly, Jacob himself understanding what the vision meant, set Gen. 28, up a stone, and poured oil upon it. When he anointed the I2< stone, did he make an idol ? No : he only set up a symbol, not an object of worship. Thou seest here the anointing ; see the Anointed also. He is the stone which the builders refused. If Jacob, who was named Israel, saw the ladder, and Nathanael was an Israelite indeed, there was 78 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. CHAP. I. a fitness in our Lord telling him Jacob's dream ; as if he said, Whose name thou art called by, his dream hath appeared unto thee : for thou shalt see the heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man. If they descend upon Him, and ascend to Him, then He is both up above and here below at the same Aug. time; above in Himself, below in His members. AUG. i/joan. G ood preachers, however, who preach Christ, are as angels c. 23. of God; i. e. they ascend and descend upon the Son of 2 Cor. man ; as Paul, who ascended to the third heaven, and 12 2 i Cor. descended so far even as to give milk to babes. He saith, 3? 2- We shall see greater things than these : because it is a greater thing that our Lord has justified us, whom He hath called, than that He saw us lying under the shadow of death. For had we remained where He saw us, what profit c. 17. would it have been? It is asked why Nathanael, to whom our Lord bears such testimony, is not found among the twelve Apostles. We may believe, however, that it was because he was so learned, and versed in the law, that our Lord had not put him among the disciples. He chose the foolish, to confound the world. Intending to break the neck of the proud, He sought not to gain the fisherman through the orator, but by the fisherman the emperor. The great Cyprian was an orator; but Peter was a fisherman before him ; and through him not only the orator, but the emperor, believed. CHAP. II. 1. And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee ; and the mother of Jesus was there : 2. And both Jesus was called, and his disciples, to the marriage. 3. And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus saith unto him, They have no wine. 4. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come. CHRYS. Our Lord being known in Galilee, they invite Chrys. Him to a marriage : And the third day there was a marriage^^,^ in Cana of Galilee. ALCUIN. Galilee is a province ; Cana xx.) i. a village in it. CHRYS. They invite our Lord to the mar- Chrys. riage, not as a great person, but merely as one they knew, ^°mj* one of the many; for which reason the Evangelist says, And the mother of Jesus was there. As they invited the mother, so they invited the Son : and therefore, Jesus was called, and His disciples to the marriage : and He came, as caring more for our good, than His own dignity. He who disdained not to take upon Him the form of a servant, dis dained not to come to the marriage of servants. AUG. Let Aug. the proud man blush to see the humility of God. Lo, p^omT among other things, the Son of the Virgin comes to a mar- Se.rm- riage ; He who, when He was with the Father, instituted marriage. BEDE. His condescension in coming to the mar- riage, and the miracle He wrought there, are, even consider- Horn. ing them in the letter only, a strong confirmation of the after faith. Therein too are condemned the errors of Tatian, Marcion, EPiPh- and others who detract from the honour of marriage. For if the undefiled bed, and the marriage celebrated with due chastity, partook at all of sin, our Lord would never have 80 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. II. come to one, Whereas now, conjugal chastity being good, the continence of widows better, the perfection of the virgin state best, to sanction all these degrees, but distinguish the merit of each, He deigned to be born of the pure womb of the Virgin ; was blessed after birth by the prophetic voice of the widow Anna; and now invited in manhood to attend the celebration of a marriage, honours that also by the presence of Tr^viii ^*s g°°dness. AUG. What marvel, if He went to that house c. 4. to a marriage, Who came into this world to a marriage. For here He has His spouse whom He redeemed with His own blood, to whom He gave the pledge of the Spirit, and whom He united to Himself in the womb of the Virgin. For the Word is the Bridegroom, and human flesh the bride, and both together are one Son of God and Son of man. That womb of the Virgin Mary is His chamber, from which he Ps.19,5. went forth as a bridegroom. BEDE. Nor is it without some in loc. mysterious allusion, that the marriage is related as taking place on the third day. The first age of the world, before the giving of the Law, was enlightened by the example of the Patriarchs ; the second, under the Law, by the writings of the Prophets ; the third, under grace, by the preaching of the Evangelists, as if by the light of the third day ; for our Lord had now appeared in the flesh. The name of the place too where the marriage was held, Cana of Galilee, which means, desire of migrating, has a typical signification, viz. that those are most worthy of Christ, who burn with devotional desires, and have known the passage from vice to virtue, from earthly to eternal things. The wine was made to fail, to give our Lord the opportunity of making better ; that so the • glory of God in man might be brought out of its hiding place : And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus saith unto Chrys. Him, They have no wine. CHRYS. But how came it StTi 2 *nto l^e motner's mind to expect so great a thing from her Son ? for he had done no miracle as yet : as we read afterwards, This beginning of miracles did Jesus. His real nature, however, was beginning now to be revealed by John, and His own conversations with His disciples ; besides that His conception, and the circumstances of His birth, had from the first given rise to high expectations in her mind: Luke 2, as Luke tells us, His mother kept all these sayings in her 51. VER. 1 4. ST. JOHN. 81 heart. Why then did she never ask Him to work a miracle before ? Because the time had now come that He should be made known. Before He had lived so much like an ordinary person, that she had not had the confidence to ask Him. But now that she heard that John had borne witness to Him, and that He had disciples, she asks Him confidently. ALCUIN. She represents here the Synagogue, which chal lenges Christ to perform a miracle. It was customary with the Jews to ask for miracles. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee ? AUG. Some who derogate from the Gospel, and say A"g-_ that Jesus was not born of the Virgin Mary, try to draw an 0*£*u argument for their error from this place ; for, how, say they, could she be His mother to whom He said, What have I to do with thee ? Now who is it who gives this account, and on whose authority do we believe it ? The Evangelist John. But he himself says, The mother of Jesus was there. Why should He say it, unless both were true. But did He there fore come to the marriage to teach men to despise their mother ? CHRYS. That He greatly venerated His mother, we chrys. know from St. Luke, who tells us that He was subject unto His Ho.m; XXl« ( 7 ' firkin is a certain measure ; as urn, amphora, and the like. 1 fttr^n- Metron is the Greek for measure : wrhence metreta? l. Two Ta)/ fir- or jjtree^ js no^ to be taken to mean some holding two, others three, but the same vessels holding two or three. Jesus saith unto them. Fill the waterpots with icater. And Chrys. they filled them up to the brim. CHRYS. But why did He Ho.™' not work the miracle before they had filled the waterpots, XX 11* &• which would have been much more wonderful ; inasmuch as it is one thing to change the quality of some existing substance, another to make it that substance out of nothing? The latter miracle would be the more wonderful, but the former would be the more easy of belief. And this principle often acts as a check, to moderate the greatness of our Lord's miracles : He wishes to make them more credible, therefore He makes them less marvellous ; a refutation this of the perverse doctrine of some, that He was a different Being from the Maker of the world. For we see Pie performs most of His miracles upon subject-matter already existing, whereas were He contrary to the Creator of the world, He would not use a material thus alien, to demonstrate His own power. He did not draw out the water Himself which Pie made wine, but ordered the servants to do so. This was for the sake of having witnesses of the miracle ; And He saith, unto them. Draw out now, and hear unto the governor of the feast. ALCUIN. The Triclinium is a circle of three couches, dine signifying couch : the ancients used to recline upon couches. And the Architriclinus is the one at the head of the Triclinium, i. e. the chief of the guests. Some say that among the Jews, Pie was a priest, and attended the marriage in order to instruct in the duties of the married state. Horn!" CHRYS. Or thus ; It might be said that the guests were xxii. 2. VER. 5 — 11. ST. JOHN. 85 drunken, and could not, in the confusion of their senses, tell whether it were water or wine. But this objection could not be brought against the attendants, who must have been sober, being occupied wholly in performing the duties of their service gracefully and in order. Our Lord therefore bid the attendants bear unto the governor of the feast ; who again would of course be perfectly sober. He did not say, Give to the guests to drink. HILARY ; Water is poured into the Hiiar. waterpots; wine is drawn out into the chalices; the senses Jj!^ of the drawer out agree not with the knowledge of thec-5- pourer in. The pourer in thinks that water is drawn out ; the drawer out thinks that wine was poured in. Wlien the ruler of the feast had tasted the water that was made wine, and knew not whence it was, (but the servants who drew the water knew,) the governor of the feast called the bridegroom. It was not a mixture, but a creation : the simple nature of water vanished, and the flavour of wine was produced ; not that a weak dilution was obtained, by means of some strong infusion, but that which was, was annihilated ; and that which was not, came to be. CHRYS. Our Lord wished the Chrys. power of His miracles to be seen gradually; and therefore x^2 He did not reveal what He had done Himself, nor did the 3- ruler of the feast call upon the servants to do so ; (for no credit would have been given to such testimony concerning a mere man, as our Lord was supposed to be,) but He called the bridegroom, who was best able to see what was done. Christ moreover did not only make wine, but the best wine. And (the ruler of the feast) saith unto him, Every man at the beginning doth set forth good wine, and when men have well drunk, then that which is worse ; but thou hast kept the good wine until now. The effects of the miracles of Christ are more beautiful and better than the productions of nature. So then that the water was made wine, the servants could testify ; that it was made good wine, the ruler of the feast and the bridegroom. It is probable that the bride groom made some answer ; but the Evangelist omits it, only mentioning what it was necessary for us to know, viz. the water being made wine. He adds, This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Can a of Galilee. It was very ne- Horn, cessary to work miracles just then, when His devoted XX11K *' 86 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. II. disciples were all collected, and present at the place, Horn, attending to what was going on. ID. Should any say that there is not sufficient proof of this being the beginning of miracles, because it is added, in Cana of Galilee, as if some had been preferred elsewhere : we answer, as we did before, c. 1. that John says below, That He might be made manifest to Israel, therefore have I come baptizing. Now if He had performed miracles in the earlier part of His life, the Jews would not have wanted another person to point Him out. If our Lord in a short time became so distinguished for the number of His miracles, that His Name was known to every one, would He not have been much more so, had He worked miracles from His earliest years ? for the things themselves would have been the more extraordinary, being per formed by a Child, and in so long a time must have become notorious. It was fit and proper however that He should not begin to work miracles at so early an age : for men would have thought the Incarnation a phantasy, and in the extremity of envy would have delivered Him to be crucified before the Aug. appointed time. AUG. This miracle of our Lord's, turning r> lx' the water into wine, is no miracle to those who know that God worked it. For the Same that day made wine in the waterpots, Who every year makes wine in the vine : only the latter is no longer wonderful, because it happens uni formly. And therefore it is that God keeps some extraordinary acts in store for certain occasions, to rouse men out of their lethargy, and make them worship Him. Thus it follows, He manifested forth His glory. ALCUIN. He was the King of glory, and changed the elements because He was their Chrys. Lord. CHRYS. He manifests His glory, as far as related to xxiii." i. Uis own ac^ 5 and if at the time many knew it not, yet was it afterwards to be heard and known of all. And His disciples believed on Him. It was probable that these would believe more readily, and give more attention to what Aug. de went on. AUG. If now for the first time they believed on Him, Evan they were n°t His disciples when they came to the marriage. 1. ii c. This however is a form of speech, such as saying that the (38.) Apostle Paul was born in Tarsus of Cilicia; not meaning by this that he was an Apostle then. In the same way when we hear of Christ's disciples being invited to the marriage. VEK. 5 — 11. ST. JOHN, 87 we should understand not disciples already, but who were to be disciples. AUG. But see the mysteries which lie hid in that Aug. miracle of our Lord. It was necessary that all things should c r5lx* be fulfilled in Christ which were written of Him : those Scriptures were the water. He made the water wine when He opened unto them the meaning of these things, and ex pounded the Scriptures ; for thus that came to have a taste which before had none, and that inebriated, which did not inebriate before. BEDE; At the time of our Lord's appearing Bede. in in the flesh, the sweet vinous taste of the law had beenv' ]' weakened by the carnal interpretations of the Pharisees. AUG. Aug. Now if He ordered the water to be poured out, and then intro- ?r^' duced the wine from the hidden recesses 1 of creation, He would l sinihus seem to have rejected the Old Testament. But converting, as He did, the water into wine, He shewed us that the Old Testament was from Himself, for it was by His order that the waterpots were filled. But those Scriptures have no meaning, if Christ be not understood there. Now we know from what time the law dates, viz. from the foundation of the world. From that time to this are six ages ; the first, reckoning from Adam to Noah ; the second, from Noah to Abraham; the third, from Abraham to David; the fourth, from David to the carrying away into Babylon ; the fifth, from that time to John the Baptist ; the sixth, from John the Baptist to the end of the world. The six waterpots then denote these six ages of prophecy. The prophecies are fulfilled ; the waterpots are full. But what is the meaning of their holding two or three firkins apiece ? Had He said three only, our minds would have run immediately to the mystery of the Trinity. Nor perhaps can we reject it, even though it is said, two or three : for the Father and the Son being named, the Holy Ghost may be understood by con- sequence ; inasmuch as it is the love between the Father and the Son, which is the Holy Ghost. Nor should we passc ^ over another interpretation, which makes the two firkins alluded to the two races of men, the Jews and the Greeks ; and the three to the three sons of Noah. ALCUIN. The servants are the doctors of the New Testament, who interpret the holy Scripture to others spiritually ; the ruler of the feast is some lawyer, as Nicodemus, Gamaliel, or Saul 88 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. II. When to the former then is committed the word of the Gospel, hid under the letter of the law, it is the water made wine, being set before the ruler of the feast. And the three J Tricli- rows * of guests at table in the house of the marriage are three' properly mentioned ; the Church consisting of three orders couches, of believers, the married, the continent, and the doctors. 'Christ has kept the good wine until now, i. e. He has deferred the Gospel till this, the sixth age. 12. After this he went clown to Capernaum, he, and his mother, and his brethren, and his disciples : and they continued there not many clays. 13. And the Jews' passover was at hand, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. Chrys. CmiYS. Our Lord being about shortly to go up to Jeru- xxiii. salem, proceeded to Capernaum, that He might not take His mother and brethren every where about with Him : After this he went down to Capernaum, He, and His mother, and His brethren, and His disciples, and they continued there not Aug. many days. AUG. The Lord our God is He, high, that He Joan 'i^ight create us; low, that He might create us anew; walk- 2. ing among men, suffering what was human, hiding what was divine. So He hath a mother, hath brethren, hath disciples: whence He hath a mother, thence hath He brethren. Scrip ture frequently gives the name of brethren, not to those only who are born of the same womb, or the same father, but to those of the same generation, cousins by the father's or mother's side. Those who are unacquainted with this way of speaking, ask, Whence hath our Lord brothers ? Did Mary bring forth again ? That could not be : with her commenced the dignity of the virgin state. Abraham was uncle of Lot, and Jacob was nephew to Laban the Syrian. Yet Abraham and Lot are called brethren ; and likewise Jacob and Laban. ALCUIN. Our Lord's brethren arc the relations of Mary and Joseph, not the sons of Mary and Joseph. For not only the demons Blessed Virgin, but Joseph also, the witness of her chastity, ab- Ev.c.ii. stained from all conjugal intercourse. AUG. And His disciples; (39!) it is uncertain whether Peter and Andrew and the sons of VER. 12, 13. ST. JOHN. 89 Zebedee, were of their number or not at this time. For Matthew first relates that our Lord came and dwelt at Capernaum, and afterwards that He called those disciples from their boats, as they were fishing. Is Matthew perhaps supplying what he had omitted ? For without any mention that it was at a subsequent time, he says, Jesus walking fo/Matt. 4, the sea of Galilee saw two brethren. Or is it better to sup- ' pose that these were other disciples ? For the writings of the Evangelists and Apostles, call not the twelve only, but all who believing in God were prepared for the kingdom of heaven by our Lord's teaching, disciples8. How is it too id. cap. that our Lord's journey to Galilee is placed here before John the Baptist's imprisonment b, when Matthew says, Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into prison,, he departed into Galilee: and Mark the same? Luke too, though he says nothing of John's imprisonment, yet places Christ's visit to Galilee after His temptation and baptism0, as the two former do. We should understand then that the three Evangelists are not opposed to John, but pass over our Lord's first coming into Galilee after his baptism ; at which time it was that He converted the water into wine. EUSEB. Euseb. When copies of the three Gospels had come to the Evan- ^cl> gelist John, he is reported, while he confirmed their fidelity iii.c. 24. and correctness, to have at the same time noticed some omissions, especially at the opening of our Lord's ministry. Certain it is that the first three Gospels seem only to contain the events of the year in which John the Baptist was im prisoned, and put to death. And therefore John, it is said, was asked to write down those acts of our Saviour's before the apprehension of the Baptist, which the former Evan gelists had passed over. Any one then, by attending, will » This supposition agrees best with was baptizing in Enon, near to Salim? what follows, which makes out the visit because there was much water there : to Galilee, in St, Matthew, St. Mark, and they came and were baptized. For and St. Luke, to be the second visit. John was not yet cast into prison." For they all mention the calling of the c Comparing Matt. 4, 12. Mark 1, Apostles as taking place in this visit; 14. Luke 4, 13. 14. it is evident that which calling therefore had not taken the order of events in the three is ex- place at the time of this first visit, actly the same; excepting that St. which St. John is relating now. And Luke omits the mention of John the it is difficult to imagine that in all three Baptist's imprisonment. The visit to this mention is parenthetical and out of Galilee in St. Luke is meant to be after the order of time. John's imprisonment, though that event >d John 3, 23. 24. And John also has not been mentioned. -H GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. 11. find that the Gospels do not disagree, but that John is re lating the events of a different date, from that which the others rhrys. refer ^0. CHKYS. He did not perform any miracle at Caper- Hom. i-ii- xxiii. i. naum, the inhabitants of which city were in a very corrupt state, and not well disposed to Him ; He went there however, and stayed some time out of respect to His mother d. BEDE ; He did not stay many days there, on account of the Passover, which was approaching: And the Jews' passover was at Orig. hand. ORIGEN; But what need of saying, of the Jews, tom.x. w}ien no other nation had the rite of the Passover? Perhaps6 in Joan. c. 14. because there are two sorts of Passover, one human, which is celebrated in a way very different from the design of Scrip ture ; another the true and Divine, which is kept in spirit and in truth. To distinguish it then from the Divine, it is said, of the Jews. ALCUIN. And He went up to Jerusalem. The Gospels mention two journeys of our Lord to Jerusalem, one in the first year of His preaching, before John was sent to prison, which is the journey now spoken of; the other in the year of His Passion. Our Lord has set us here an example of careful obedience to the Divine commands. For if the Son of God fulfilled the injunctions of His own law, by keeping the festivals, like the rest, with what holy zeal should we ser- Orig vants prepare for and celebrate them ? ORIGEN ; In a mys- am. x. tical sense, it was meet that after the marriage in Cana of Galilee, and the banquet and wine, our Lord should take His mother, brethren, and disciples to the land of conso lation (as Capernaum signifies') to console, by the fruits that were to spring up and by abundance of fields, those who d Whom, St. Chrys. adds, He was why is it, went down, and not went about to leave behind when He went to up? Perhaps his ' brethren' are here Jerusalem. to be understood of those powers who e Origen literally, It is called the went down with Him, not being called Jews' , as opposed to the Lord's Passover, to the marriage, according to the inter- For as the Jews had made His Father's pretation we have mentioned, but re house an house of merchandize, notsanc- ceiving lower and inferior benefit from tifying it, so had they made the Lord's them ; and of another sort from those passover a human, a Jewish passover, called the disciples of Christ. ForifHis choosingthat which was low and carnal, mother be invited, there are some bear- f Origen literally, that He might ing fruit, whom our Lord Himself console His disciples, and the soul that goes down to help with the ministers of conceived Him of the Holy Ghost, or the Word, and His disciples; His them who were there benefited with mother too accompanying — The inter- the fruits that were to spring up pretation to which Origen refers is in their full [replenished] land. And lost. torn c VER. 14 — 17. ST. JOHN. 1)1 received His discipline, and the mind which had conceived Him by the Holy Ghost; and who were there to be holpen. For some there are bearing fruit, to whom our Lord Himself comes down with the ministers of His word and disciples, helping such, His mother being present. Those however who are called to Capernaum, do not seem capable of His presence long : that is, a land which admitteth lower conso lation, is not able to take in the enlightenment, from many doctrines ; being capable to receive few only. ALCUIN. Or Capernaum, we may interpret " a most beautiful village," and so it signifies the world, to which the Word of the Father came down. BEDK; But He continued there only a few days, because he lived with men in this world only a short time. ORIGEN; Jerusalem, as our Saviour Himself saith, is the city Orig of the great King, into which none of those who remain earth ascend, or enter. Only the soul which has a certain c. 16 natural loftiness, and clear insight into things invisible, is the inhabitant of that city. Jesus alone goes up thither8. But His disciples seem to have been present afterwards. The zeal of Thine house hath eaten me up. But it is as though in every one of the disciples who went up, it was Jesus who went up. 14. And found in the temple those that sold oxen and sheep and doves, and the changers of money sitting : 15. And when he had made a scourge of small cords, he drove them all out of the temple, and the sheep, and the oxen ; and poured out the changers' money, and overthrew the tables ; 16. And said unto them that sold doves, Take these things hence ; make not my Father's house an house of merchandise. 17. And his disciples remembered that it was written, The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up. BEDE; Our Lord on coming to Jerusalem, immediately Z He, and His mother, and disciples, went down to Capernaum. Here Jesus went to the marriage : He, and His alone is mentioned Orig. in loc. mother, and brethren, and disciples, 92 GOSPEL ACCORDING TO CHAP. II. entered the temple to pray ; giving us an example that, Mat.2i. wheresoever we go, our first visit should be to the house of God to pray. And He found in the temple those that sold oxen, and sheep, and doves, and the changers of money Aug. sitting. AUG. Such sacrifices were prescribed to the people, c. 4. in condescension to their carnal minds ; to prevent them from turning aside to idols. They sacrificed sheep, and oxen, and doves. BEDE; Those however, who came from a distance, being unable to bring with them the animals re quired for sacrifice, brought the money instead. For their convenience the Scribes and Pharisees ordered animals to be sold in the temple, in order that, when the people had bought and offered them afterwards, they might sell them again, and thus make great profits. And changers of money sitting ; changers of money sat at the table to supply change to buyers and sellers. But our Lord disapproving of any worldly business in His house, especially one of so question- Aug. able a kind, drove out all engaged in it. AUG. He who was crgX' to be scourged by them, was first of all the scourger; And when He had made a scourge of small cords, He drove them all out of the temple. THEOPHYL. Nor did He cast out only those who bought and sold, but their goods also : The sheep, and the oven, and, poured out the changers' money, and overthrew the tables, i. e. of the money changers, which were Orig. coffers of pence. ORIGEN; Should it appear something out inj'oan. of the order of things, that the Son of God should make a c- 16- scourge of small cords, to drive them out of the temple ? We have one answer in which some take refuge, viz. the divine power of Jesus, Who, when He pleased, could extinguish the wrath of His enemies however innumerable, and quiet the Ps. 32, tumult of their minds: Tlie Lord briugeth the counsel of the ° ' ' heathen to nought. This act indeed exhibits no less power, than His more positive miracles; nay rather, more than the miracle by which water was converted into wine : in that there the subject-matter was inanimate, here, the minds of so Aug. many thousands of men are overcome. AUG. It is evident Ev Mi! that this was done on two several occasions; the first c. 67. mentioned by John, the last by the other three. ORIGEN ; tomg'x. John says here that He drove out the sellers from the temple ; in Joan. ]yj;a^ilcWj the sellers and buyers. The number of buyers was VER. 14 — 17. ST. JOHN. 93 much greater than of the sellers : and therefore to drive them out was beyond the power of the carpenter's Son, as He was supposed to be, had He not by His divine power put all things under Him, as it is said. BEDE ; The Evangelist sets before us both natures of Christ : the human in that His mother accompanied Him to Capernaum; the divine, in that He said, Make not My Fathers house an house of merchan dize. CHRYS. Lo, He speaks of God as His Father, and they Chrys. are not angry, for they think He means it in a common xx°j™' in sense. But afterwards when He spoke more openly, and J°an. shewed that He meant equality, they were enraged. In Matthew's account too, on driving them out, He says, Ye have c- xxi- made it (My Father's house] a den of thieves. This was justxxii. is. before His Passion, and therefore He uses severer language. But the former being at the beginning of His miracles, His answer is milder and more indulgent. AUG. So that temple Aug. was still a figure only, and our Lord cast out of it all who ^rj^n came to it as a market. And what did they sell ? Things c. 4. that were necessary for the sacrifice of that time. What if He had found men drunken ? If the house of God ought not to be a house of merchandize, ought it to be a house of drunkenness ? CHRYS. But why did Christ use such violence ? Chrys. He was about to heal on the Sabbath day, and to do many xx°™'2 things which appeared to them transgressions of the Law. That He might not appear therefore to be acting contrary to God, He did this at His own peril ; and thus gave them to understand, that He who exposed Himself to such peril to defend the decency of the house, did not despise the Lord of that house. For the same reason, to shew His agreement with God, He said not, the Holy house, but, My Father's house. It follows, And His disciples remembered ivhat ivas written ; The %eal of thine house hath eaten me up. BEDE ; in loc. His disciples seeing this most fervent zeal in Him, remem bered that it was from zeal for His Father's house that our Saviour drove the ungodly from the temple. ALCUIN. Zeal, taken in a good sense, is a certain fervour of the Spirit, by which the mind, all human fears forgotten, is stirred up to the defence of the truth. AUG. He then is eaten up with zeal Aug. for God's house, who desires to correct all that he scesJrgX* wrong there ; and, if he cannot correct, endures and 94 GOSI'EL ACCORDING TO CHAP. II. mourns. Tii thine house thou busiest thyself to prevent matters going wrong ; in the house of God, where salvation is offered, oughtest thou to be indifferent ? Hast thou a friend? admonish him gently ; a wife ? coerce her severely; a maid-servant ? even compel her with stripes. Do what thou art able, according to thy station. ALCUIN. To take the passage mystically, God enters His Church spiritually every day, and marks each one's behaviour there. Let us be careful then, when we are in God's Church, that we indulge not in stories, or jokes, or hatreds, or lusts, lest on a sudden He come and scourge us, and drive us out of His Church. Orig. ORIGEN ; It is possible even for the dweller in Jerusalem to inJoan mcur glu^, and even the most richly endowed may stray, c. 16. And unless these repent speedily, they lose the capacity wherewith they were endued. He finds them in the temple, i. e. in sacred places, or in the office of enunciating the Church's truths, some who make His Father's house an house of merchandize ; i. e. who expose to sale the oxen whom they ought to reserve for the plough, lest by turning back they should become unfit for the kingdom of God : also who prefer the unrighteous mammon to the sheep, from which they have the material of ornament ; also who for miserable gain abandon the watchful care of them who are called metaphorically doves, without all gall or bitterness11. Our Saviour finding these in the holy house, maketh a scourge of small cords, and driveth them out, together with the sheep and oxen exposed for sale, scatters the heaps of money, as unbeseeming in the house of God, and overthrows the tables set up in the minds of the covetous, forbidding them to sell doves in the house of God any longer. I think too that He meant the above, as a mystical intimation that whatsoever1 was to be performed with regard to that sacred oblation by the priests, was not to be performed after the manner of material oblations, and that the law was not to be observed as the carnal Jews wished. For our Lord, by driving away the sheep and oxen, and ordering away the doves, h Solertiam columbarum privata qui- xgorwres which applies to the dove, libet amaritudine vilipendent. The text ' Orig. literally, "that the Divine is not grammatically correct, butsoler- service relating to that temple was no tiam is plainly the reading of Iw^Xs/ay, longer to be performed,"